1970s Funky Fashion From Pop Tops
'I blew out my flip flop, stepped on a pop top; cut my heel, had to cruise on back home'. - Jimmy Buffet, Margaritaville
For those of us old enough to remember, soda cans and beer cans from the 1970s had a pull-tab that peeled completely off the can. This old style ring-pull had sharp edges that frequently cut bare feet because there were millions of them littering sidewalks and beaches all over the world. Luckily in the decades that followed, this terrible design was phased out for the secured pop tab that we use today
A fifty year old discarded pop top found on a sidewalk last week.
One cultural byproduct of the old pull-tabs was oddball craft projects. Kids in the 1970s may remember that you could easily make things with the old pop tabs. All you had to do was fold one tab on top of the other and the next thing you knew, you had a groovy room divider or door curtain to separate you from your annoying little brother! These upcycled pull tabs also opened up a world of funky fashion design for teens.......
On our blog we often pay homage to eclectic fashion designers who inspire us like Paco Rabanne and pioneering handbag designers. Today we pay homage to our funky 1970s forefather, the man (the legend!) who literally wrote the book on pop topping. This man went by the name of the Pop-Top Terp. His creations are a forerunner of our own metallic clothing.
Photos courtesy of Pop Topping! By Pop-Top Terp and Kenneth Patton, ©1975, Chilton Book Company, Radnor, PA. The book is out of print but if you must have it, copies can still be found on Amazon.
Spent a few days in NYC staying at a friend’s cousin’s place in a converted warehouse in Greenwich Village (I think.) Her name was Fabienne M. Poptop Terp lived in the same apt. (I think) or at least was always over there. He was a very interesting and fun bloke and at the time was a mini fashion sensation with his metallic creations. Those were good times…
As a child I did an arts workshop at an upper west side Manhattan church basement in the 1970s. We collected pop tops as a contest and then had somebody teach us how to make things out of it. It might’ve been this guy! He made a bathing suit that he wore and there was a whole lot of pubic hair showing. Pure 1970s!
I knew Pop Top Terp well. He was a talented and creative artist. He was also kind, gentle, and a wonderful friend. Sadly, he died of AIDS in the early 1980s just when the epidemic began. I remember visiting him in St. Vincent’s Hospital and having to wear a mask because they didn’t know exactly what he had. But he always had a smile. He was a treasure in so many ways. I will always miss him.
I just found this 1970 article from TIME magazine.
https://content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,942292,00.html
OMG. I remember Pop-Top Terp coming to our elementary school in Flushing to give a presentation about his work. Definitely unforgettable.
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