(InStyle) -- The  word itself -- housewife -- still seems almost shockingly retro. But  it's having something of a renaissance, thanks in no small part to  Bravo's now ubiquitous "Real Housewives" series. So the time seems right  to salute the small screen's most fashionable female homemakers -- read  on to see who made InStyle's top 10!
Donna Stone, "The Donna Reed Show"
From 1958-1966,  Donna Reed played the kind of coolly capable stay-at-home mother who's  really only seen on television: Always impeccably turned out -- the  woman did housework in full-skirted shirtdresses and chic high heels --  she embodied a particular upper-middle-class ideal like no character  before or since.
 Laura Petrie, "The Dick Van Dyke Show" 
Just 24 when she was cast in this 1961-1966 comedy, Mary Tyler Moore put  a youthful spin on her traditional role ... and did her part to  modernize the typical TV housewife's wardrobe, as well. "I had Laura  wear pants," she has explained of her famous cigarette-style slacks,  "because I said, 'Women don't wear full-skirted dressed to vacuum in.'"
 
Lisa Douglas, "Green Acres" 

Gorgeous, glamorous Eva Gabor played to type in this goofy 1965-1971  series, starring as a New York City (by way of Hungary) socialite forced  to swap her palatial Park Avenue pad for a run-down old farmhouse. Even  after relocating to rural Hooterville, though, she dressed the part of  an uptown girl, donning pretty peignoirs and chic dresses to collect  fresh-laid eggs and coax milk from cows. 
  Marge Simpson, "The Simpson"
   Certainly she's got style. Since 1989, Marge Simpson (voiced by actress  Julie Kavner) has consistently rocked a signature look: her strapless  green dress, paired with low-cut red kitten heels and a red beaded  necklace, is timeless, and her bright blue beehive is almost literally  inimitable, making Mrs. Homer one-of-a-kind.
  
 Vivian Banks, "The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air" 
 Two different actresses played "Aunt Viv" during this show's 1990-1996  run, and both had their supporters. But Janet Hubert-Whitten (1990-1993)  and Daphne Maxwell Reid (pictured above, 1993-1996) shared a wardrobe  as restrainedly chic as you'd expect from a hip professor turned Bel-Air  mom.
 
 Charlotte York Goldenblatt, "Sex and the City" 
As the always-impeccable Charlotte -- who retired early from her gallery  job after marrying Trey (Kyle MacLachlan) and then found lasting love  and domesticity with Harry (Evan Handler) -- Kristen Davis wore classic  Upper East Side favorites like Oscar de la Renta. Her look was slightly  more adventurous in the 2008 and 2010 films than it was in the series'  initial 1998-2004 run (she donned vintage Halston and YSL during the  girls' trip to Abu Dhabi) but she'll always be remembered for her  mastery of the three Ps: Prim, Pretty, and Proper.
 
Gabrielle Solis, "Desperate Housewives" 
In this show's seven seasons, Gabrielle (Eva Longoria) has been through a  lot -- three marriages to two different men, several affairs, and two  babies (one of which she later learned was switched at birth). Despite  the drama -- and having rebounded from a period during which she was  forced to sell her designer clothes to keep the family afloat -- she's  still perfectly capable of looking (and dressing) like the fashion model  she used to be.
 Betty Draper, "Mad Men"  
January Jones, the actress who has played Betty Draper (now Francis)  since 2007, has said that putting on her character's early 1960's  garments is a key part of her process. "I get into the girdle, the bra  with the pointy cups, the stockings, the heels, the big dress ... and  I'm halfway there." Ironically, the show's retro full-skirted ensembles  have had a profound effect on current fashion, which is perhaps part of  the reason January has said she hopes the action doesn't continue into  the 1980's. "I don't want to see Betty in Spandex."
Gloria Delgado-Pritchett, "Modern Family"  
"Latin women are very comfortable with their bodies and their sexuality.  We aren't afraid to show that off a little bit more," actress Sofia  Vergara has said. If so, her character on this current series seems to  share that outlook. Gloria, a stay-at-home mom, wouldn't be caught dead  in frumpy sweats or mom jeans; instead, she chooses slim pencil skirts  and a series of colorful, cleavage-baring tops.
     
Kyle Richards,"The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills"  
She's a little less flashy than her castmates (several of whom seem to  have been lifted from the pages of a Judith Krantz novel). Instead,  former actress Kyle prefers to keep it semi-real, although she still  likes a little glitter. "I love the sparkles that are very much in style  right now," she has said. "I tone it down with black pants and boots. I  like to wear things that are feminine and sexy, but not too trendy."