Tuesday, 6 July 2010

Smallest Bikini in the World

The smallest bikini we have found so far is this model from by Double Take Micro Wear. There are smaller models available, but they don't cover the vital parts and so we don't consider them true bikinis.

If you desire that golden tan over as much of your body as you can possibly receive without going totally nude, then the smallest bikini is the perfect swimwear for you.

This bikini and others made by the same company are the smallest bikini’s ever created. They are made from 20% Lycra (or other elastane) and 80% Nylon. There may not be just one smallest bikini because of the different varieties and styles such as the micro bikini, mini bikini and the tear drop bikini.

The cost for you to wear practically nothing at all is around $29 however, if you wish to have that golden tan without all the attention, you had better use the smallest bikini in a tanning salon.


Smallest Bikini in the World Unofficially

This is a file picture of a young girl model wearing the string bikini which is now claimed as the smallest bikini in the world.


World’s Smallest Bathing Suit or Bikini

Although archaeological evidence points to the existence of the bikini long before the twentieth century, documented history of the modern bikini begins the summer after the close of World War II. As France recovered from the reeling effects of the war on its home soil, Jacques Heim, a fashion designer from the popular beach resort of Cannes, was busily working on his latest style invention, a two-piece swimsuit of a very revealing nature. Heim debuted his creation in a local beach shop in the early summer of 1946. He named the swimsuit the “Atome” in honor of the recently discovered atom, the smallest particle of matter yet detected. He then sent skywriters over Cannes’ beaches, announcing that the Atome, “the world’s smallest bathing suit,” was now available for purchase (Lencek & Bosker 1989). Heim may have become more than just a small footnote in the bikini’s history if it were not for the timely invention and superior christening skills of a French mechanical engineer turned swimsuit designer, Louis Reard. Just three weeks after Heim unveiled his Atome creation, Reard brought out a remarkably similar swimsuit to be sold along the French Riviera. His swimsuit also contained just two scant pieces of cloth that revealed a woman’s back and navel for the first time in the modern era. Reard named his swimsuit the “bikini,” taking the name from the Bikini Reef, one of a series of islands in the South Pacific where testing on the new atomic bomb was occurring that summer (Lencek & Bosker 1989). Historians assume Reard termed his swimsuit the “bikini” because he believed its revealing style would create reactions among people similar to those created by America’s atomic bomb in Japan just one summer earlier. Whether this was his true reason or not, the bikini name stuck, and Reard went down in history as the inventor of the popular two-piece swimsuit.

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