If women in some countries were repurposing old zips to make jewellry, and old curtains to make aprons, women in other countries had enough resources to pursue the occasional fashion whimsy. I'm referring here to "pedal pushers", which first appeared on the cover of Life in 1944 as a youthful fad.
"PEDAL PUSHERS"
This fall college girls will wear a new kind of knee-length shorts
For years male bicyclists have had the sensible custom of rolling up the right trouser leg to avoid tangling with the chain. When college girls took to riding bicycles in slacks, they first rolled up one trouser leg, then rolled up both. This whimsy has now produced a trim variety of long shorts, called "pedal pushers". Introduced at recent college fashion shows, they look like little boys' short pants.
Best footwear with pedal pushers are moccasins. Since these are rationed, girls this summer have been going barefoot (see cover) and they are expected to appear on campuses this fall in bare feet. But bare feet are not allowed in class. In some places pedal pushers themselves will not be allowed in classrooms.
Most Eastern colleges will permit girls to were pedal pushers on the campus. Some of them (Smith, Vassar, Mount Holyoke, Sarah Lawrence) will also permit them to go to classes. California colleges will have none of them either in class or on campus. The University of Kansas begs the question by saying that these knee-length shorts are permissible "if they look enough like a skirt to fool a nearsighted professor."
In some ways these garments seem the epitome of wartime praticality and economy: practical because they made riding a bicycle easier, and economic because they didn't use much material. It's clear that some conservatives in the older generation didn't approve of them, but that probably made them all the more appealing to the girls who wore them!
Pedal pushers would go on to be a post-war staple in American casual wear. Once they moved from campuses to the suburbs they'd change slightly in design, becoming a little bit longer and a lot slimmer. I wonder how many of the young students mentioned in the article above continued wearing pedal pushers as adults?

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