T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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761.1 | more historical costume ! | SUBURB::WILSON | David EJ Wilson in Acre Road | Tue Mar 15 1988 12:46 | 15 |
| This note is an addendum to the base note .0 May I thank moderator
Bonnie for unmessing my original basenote which was fouled up by
a system problem.
So...if you have experience making or wearing historical costume,
or have explored the problems of making people today look like 18/19
Cent people do please get in touch.
Just recently I have heard of a 1950s fashion designer saying that
today women cannot wear the 1950 dresses because of 'shape'. Really
?
David SUBURB::WILSON
|
761.2 | | CSC32::WOLBACH | | Tue Mar 15 1988 12:58 | 19 |
| Such an interesting subject! I did take several semesters
of historical costume-alas, 15 years ago...some points I
remember:
Costume (clothing) was complimented by hairstlye and makeup
(or lack of), including 'beauty treatments' such as eyebrow
plucking, additions of beauty marks, etc.
Carriage and movement greatly influenced the style of dress,
and vice versa....posture, range of motion, facial expressions,
walk (small steps for example, when tight skirts were popular).
Even such small elements as hand movements influence how 'authentic'
a costume appears (it takes real practice to carry and use a fan
gracefully and naturally).
DK
|
761.3 | | 3D::CHABOT | 4294967294 more lines... | Tue Mar 15 1988 16:52 | 11 |
| It's unfair to criticize costuming by what you see in the movies.
This winter I attended a showing of Hollywood costumes at LACMA.
The accompanying material was quite informative, showing how some
costumes were horribly modified to either cater to what the audience
thought people dressed like at the time, or to what the actress
and actors wanted to show off. The exhibit included sketches by
the costumers and examples of accurate design. Several times, mention
was made of arguments made by designers who wanted exact historical
accuracy. Some of the costumes were accurate, some were not, but
all were fun to look at, and all the exhibited costumes showed
amazing attention to detail.
|
761.4 | My wife might be able to help | PSG::PURMAL | Ca plane pour moi | Tue Mar 15 1988 23:46 | 12 |
| My wife (who is unfortunately not a DEC employee) was a costumer
during a portion of her college career. She worked in the costume
shops of College of Marin, and San Francisco State University and
studied costumes and costuming quite a bit. If you give me some
specific questions I can ask her to address them.
She gave me a fascinating tour of the Victoria and Albert museum's
costume display. She pointed out how certain features of the costumes
grew and shrunk as different aspects of the female body became
"popular" during different periods.
ASP
|
761.5 | | CHEFS::MANSFIELD | So that's how it's done ! | Wed Mar 16 1988 07:08 | 13 |
|
A couple of thoughts...
In .0 you mention that some costumes (with corsets etc) would be
unwearable today. I would have thought that when for example in
victorian times, tiny waists were the fashion, women probably started
wearing corsets when fairly young which I would have thought would
have affected the way their bones grew as they developed. Also people
were smaller then, I presume this was perhaps due to not such a
good diet.
I was also going to mention make up & hairstyles, but I see someone
else has already mentioned that.
|
761.6 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Wed Mar 16 1988 08:37 | 8 |
| But at any given time, women come in all shapes and sizes. I think
the trick would be finding the ones who are a good match for the
period in question to model the costumes most appropriately.
I have known women with 'Twiggy' bodies, with hourglass figures,
with 40's pin-up chests, with 'boyish hips' (1920's), and so forth.
Another lesson in how relative the standards of beauty are!
|
761.7 | fashion, style, and adornment | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Wed Mar 16 1988 11:24 | 37 |
| re: .6
Good point, Holly.
For a pioneer-days celebration several years ago, I wore a riding
dress that used to belong to my great-great grandmother. I
couldn't get into the boots, but otherwise the costume fit me very
well and I felt quite comfortable in it, corsets and all. (And
this was after kid #1.) The dress was made in the 1880's, when
hips and bosoms were in style. :) :)
A friend of mine, who was in theater, was a perfect Renaissance
woman, with good hips, sloping shoulders, and very white skin. Her
chest was shaped in a way to show off those breastplate-type dress
fronts that Queen Elizabeth is always shown wearing. She found
that costume comfortable, since it suited her.
I notice that nobody has mentioned male costuming at all -- a lack
that has come up in almost every discussion of historical dress
that I've ever participated in. (Except for lewd jokes about kilts
and codpieces).
Men wore full makeup in the late 1700's. They powdered and
braided their hair. They wore lace and perfume until about
Victorian times. In the 1500's, male costume was more flambouyant
than female (women were supposed to be modest).
The urge to decorate one's body appears to be universal. Jewelry,
paint, and symbolic and non-functional clothing are found in every
culture known to archaeology and anthropology, on people of
all ages and sexes and classes.
Our culture, with its dowdy, plainly costumed men, is the
anomalous one.
--bonnie
|
761.8 | It's hard to imagine a `macho' man in lace | CHEFS::MANSFIELD | So that's how it's done ! | Wed Mar 16 1988 11:37 | 7 |
|
I wonder what it was that made men change from lace and perfume
to pinstripe suits ? Was fancy dress thought too frivolous in the
Victorian era or something ? Has anyone got any ideas why this should
change so much in a couple of hundred years ?
Sarah.
|
761.10 | "It was a dark and stormy night..." | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Mar 16 1988 13:02 | 16 |
| Until the early 19th century, men dressed up in bright colors,
and in general peacocked around. Then, around 1820(?), Bulwar-Lytton
wrote the novel _Pelham_, in which his narrator and "hero"
espoused the belief that a man looked his finest in evening dress
of stark black and white.
Voil�! Overnight men changed their plumage. Only in the last
twenty years or so have bright feathers started to re�merge among
the males.
I'm sure there were other factors. Who knows 'em?
Ann B.
P.S. A sensible man wore his plainest dark coat, and tucked back
his ruffles when he duelled.
|
761.11 | | JENEVR::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Wed Mar 16 1988 13:20 | 7 |
| Re: .10
I thought it was Beau Brummel who ushered in simplicity in men's
wear a few years earlier (maybe it didn't *really* catch on for
a while). Also, I thought Bulwar-Lytton was nearer the Victorian
era than the Georgian. (Bulwar-Lytton was the author of the infamous
opening line, "It was a dark and stormy night.")
|
761.12 | More rumors... | MANANA::RAVAN | Tryin' to make it real... | Wed Mar 16 1988 13:26 | 29 |
| I *believe* it was "Beau" Brummell who first shocked society by
appearing at a formal affair in a closely-tailored black coat and
trousers instead of the usual colorful jacket, knee-pants and
stockings. Having stood society on its ear, he then got to see his
style emulated by everybody - especially once royalty started taking
it up. (The version I heard had it that George IV, who was rather
portly, liked the new fashion because it made him look slim... or
so his courtiers told him.)
Well, anyway, it's as good a myth as any!
And, once "fashion" had been started, Queen Victoria's lengthy reign
made sure that everybody who *was* anybody in the British Empire
(and in most of its allied nations) took up the same fashions.
I also believe that formal etiquette (as in books of "how to's")
began to rise in popularity at about the same time, thus codifying
the new fashions.
[Side note: I find it rather entertaining to read articles about native
tribes wherein the authors comment on the local customs concerning
personal adornment. They typically make it all sound very odd and
unbelievable: "The women smear their faces with colored ointments made
from crushed roots, and insert ornaments through holes pierced in their
noses." But how do these differ significantly from the face-painting
rituals to be observed in the girls' rest rooms in most junior-high or
high schools?]
-b
|
761.13 | one contriubtion to change | DANUBE::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Wed Mar 16 1988 13:32 | 9 |
| I don't know about dress but I do know that men started wearing
their hair consistantly short after WWI ...the lice that spread
in the trench wars carried typhus....so short hair was seen as
being cleaner and preventing disease.
I suspect like all changes the style changes were gradual and made
up of many different factors.
Bonnie Jeanne
|
761.14 | | MANANA::RAVAN | Tryin' to make it real... | Wed Mar 16 1988 14:05 | 4 |
| Re .11 and .12: Great minds think alike - and great noters all note
after lunch!
-b
|
761.15 | rise of the middle class | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Wed Mar 16 1988 14:22 | 22 |
| re: 12 and others,
All these factors correspond to the rise of the middle class.
Ettiquette (never could spell that word!) books rose because
the new middle class wanted to know how the upper class lived
so they could pass as upper class. The simpler the dress was,
the fewer mistakes there were.
Similarly, "correct" English became much more codified and
much more rigid. People who feared they were going to make
mistakes of diction that would reveal their humble origins
weren't about to allow others to use syntax that might lead
to those mistakes.
I hadn't connected the change in clothing styles with the change
in manners and grammar, though.
I've got a scholarly study of these factors. I'll fish it
out and see if it has anything relevant to say.
--bonnie
|
761.16 | As an emerging peacock... | BRONS::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Thu Mar 17 1988 13:08 | 52 |
| Although you can find folk with "old-fashioned" bodies, the
influence of garments on changing body shape can be very real
and hard to duplicate by accident. My wife's grandfather, I am
told could put his hands around the waist of his young wife, a
feat much less likely in the absence of cradle to grave corset
wearing.
Regarding men's fashion, it is well to remember that although
Brummel was by the lights of his time, an advocate of plain
dress, he would have been quite a peacock by the standards of
the middle of this century or even today. As to where the trend
to stark simplicity in men's dress started, I would say that it
is a compound of several influences, of which I can think of
about four.
First of all there was the trend towards a simple elegence
amongst the style setters--Beau Brummel and Bulwar-Litton's
fictional hero amongst them. This was in part an expression of
the natural swing of fashion from simple to complex and back.
Secondly there was Queen Victoria. Her influence on the world
extended throughout and beyond the Victorian era. Under her
influence there was a fairly extreme damping of the extravagence
of earlier days. Her own dress and that of the women who
emulated her was very conservative. The men who had to deal with
her also became quite conservative in their appearence and their
manner. In many ways she had more influence on the men than on
the women. Excepting herself, few women were in positions of
power, so the people who interacted with her and who had to
curry her favor were men.
Thirdly was the rise of the middle class. In earlier centuries
there was little in the way of "middle class fashion". The upper
middle class followed the fashions of the upper classes to which
they aspired. The lower middle class dressed as well as they
could, but with a very practical eye. In the 19th and 20th
centuries the middle class took on its own identity and
developed its own fashions. These fashions were practical and
uniform as befit the needs and desires of the class.
Finally is the long standing influence of the military on men's
dress, and the increasing practicality of military uniform. The
modern men's suit, for instance has lapels because it was the
custom of off-duty officers to open the stiff high collars of
their tunics and turn them back. If you turn up your lapels you
get a Neru-jacket sort of look which is very like the military
tunic of the early 19th century. Similarly men's hair styles are
based on the sanitary needs of WWI trench warfare, and ties
trace back to the military etc. As military dress became more
practical and plain so did civilian dress.
JimB.
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761.17 | he was very fond of the gold braid on his hat | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Thu Mar 17 1988 14:34 | 19 |
| re: .16
Jim, I didn't mean to discount entirely the difference fashion
makes on actual physical structure. I did mean that if we put you
and me both into 1880's riding habits, I would be fairly
comfortable but you probably wouldn't. Similarly, if you put you,
me, and my friend into Renaissance costumes, she would be fairly
comfortable while I would be looking for a cowherd's tunic.
It's interesting to note that in various societies and places,
warrior dress has been more extravagant and peacockish than
the dress of everyday people. In fact, it's almost true today.
One of my professors was a retired Naval officer. Whenever he had
to go to a dressup function he wore his Navy uniform rather than a
suit because it was flashier -- he could wear white gloves, a
stripe on his pants, etc.
--bonnie
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761.18 | surgery for beauty! | IPG::HUNT | Diana | Mon Mar 21 1988 11:09 | 6 |
| I was watching a TV programme last week in which they said that
'sometimes the lower ribs were surgically removed' to enable
tighter bodices to be worn. So waspie waists must have been
VERY prized.
diana.
|
761.19 | yuck | 3D::CHABOT | how could the reference count be zero? | Mon Mar 21 1988 12:23 | 1 |
| Yes, well, so were "Lotus hooks" in another part of the world.
|
761.20 | and... | LEZAH::BOBBITT | modem butterfly | Mon Mar 21 1988 16:17 | 7 |
| yes, in addition to surgical removal of ribs, pressure from some
whalebone corsets at the height of the fashion trend exerted 80
pounds per square inch on the wearer's body...no wonder women were
always said to be weak and swooning back then...they couldn't breathe!
-jody
|
761.21 | and it messed up their digestive systems too | VOLGA::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Mon Mar 21 1988 16:56 | 1 |
| and dsypepsia was a common aliment (i.e. gas)
|
761.22 | Although our girth isn't the worry point in LMO4 | 3D::CHABOT | how could the reference count be zero? | Mon Mar 21 1988 17:02 | 2 |
| Hmmm. As every good VS8000 engineer knows, dyspepsia is also caused
by worry.
|
761.23 | rib removal | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Wed Mar 23 1988 08:53 | 8 |
| While the surgical removal of the lower ribs did occur, it was
rare -- surgery was considerably more dangerous then and a
woman who went through it had to be desperate to conform.
They would be analogous to present-day women who are risking their
eyesight to have indelible eyeliner tattooed onto their eyelids.
--bonnie
|
761.24 | Where are the fake hips? | AQUA::WALKER | | Wed Mar 23 1988 09:12 | 3 |
| Also I have heard is the current practice of models to have certain
teeth (molars) removed so that their face appears thinner!
|
761.25 | and now? | COLORS::LARUE | | Mon May 02 1988 13:51 | 4 |
| I am curious about how this would all apply to dress codes?
dondi
|