When United States entered an economic recession in 1990, the glittering, shoulder-padded excess of the ’80s quickly felt outdated. Designer Calvin Klein offered a reset.
Already a household name—thanks to his denim, the infamous 1980 Brooke Shields ad (“You want to know what comes between me and my Calvins? Nothing.”) and his best-selling Obsession perfume—Klein’s quieter, cleaner aesthetic helped set a new fashion mood.
“Calvin Klein’s era of minimalism was a sign of the times,” says Lisa Marsh, author of The House of Klein: Fashion, Controversy, and a Business Obsession. “History remembers this era as one that is an antidote to ’80s maximalism. No one will ever don a simple slip dress without, consciously or unconsciously, saying a little thank you to Calvin Klein.”
A New Kind of Minimalism
Minimalism wasn’t new to fashion, but Klein’s version was distinctly American—featuring clean silhouettes, body-skimming bias cuts, tailored coats and monochrome palettes.
“Calvin Klein had an innate ability to see what was coming,” Marsh says. “Remember, he was part of the wave of the first big-name fashion designers. He lived through the disco ’70s, which were over the top. He lived through the excesses of the 1980s: Which was bigger—your hair or your bubble skirt? He was probably the first to see that change was needed. Just like he was the first to see that we wanted designer underwear and a unisex fragrance.”
The fashion press agreed. A 1990 New York Times runway review called his fall collection “quiet, wonderful and just about perfect,” noting the models’ natural faces, subdued colors and “masterly” cuts free of ruffles or decoration. “As a superbly yet simply dressed woman often makes others at a social gathering look overdressed, Mr. Klein’s fall collection … tends to make most others look overdone,” the review stated.
By the mid-1990s, Klein’s aesthetic was a fashion force. Vogue called his fall 1995 collection “classic,” praising its “clean lines and eternal shapes.” His spring 1996 collection introduced soft pastels and scoop-neck tank dresses with swimwear-inspired backs. “I love color, but I want it in flowers, not clothes,” he told the magazine.