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1795–1820 in Western fashion

Fashion in the period 1795–1820 in European and European-influenced countries saw the final triumph of undress or informal styles over the brocades, lace, periwigs and powder of the earlier 18th century. In the aftermath of the French Revolution, no one wanted to appear to be a member of the French aristocracy, and people began using clothing more as a form of individual expression of the true self than as a pure indication of social status.[1] As a result, the shifts that occurred in fashion at the turn of the 19th century granted the opportunity to present new public identities that also provided insights into their private selves. Katherine Aaslestad indicates how "fashion, embodying new social values, emerged as a key site of confrontation between tradition and change."[2]

In the early 1800s, women wore thin gauzy outer dresses while men adopted trousers and overcoats. Rutger Jan Schimmelpenninck and his family, 1801–02, by Pierre-Paul Prud'hon
Madame Raymond de Verninac by Jacques-Louis David, with clothes and chair in Directoire style. "Year 7", that is 1798–99.
Painting of a family game of checkers ("jeu de dames") by French artist Louis-Léopold Boilly, c. 1803.
A well-to-do family edges cautiously along a plank to avoid the muddy streets of Paris, by Boilly, 1803

For women's dress, the day-to-day outfit of the skirt and jacket style were practical and tactful, recalling the working-class woman.[3] Women's fashions followed classical ideals, and stiffly boned stays were abandoned in favor of softer, less boned corsets.[4] This natural figure was emphasized by being able to see the body beneath the clothing. Visible breasts were part of this classical look, and some characterized the breasts in fashion as solely aesthetic and sexual.[5]

This era of British history is known as the Regency period, marked by the regency between the reigns of George III and George IV. But the broadest definition of the period, characterized by trends in fashion, architecture, culture, and politics, begins with the French Revolution of 1789 and ends with Queen Victoria's 1837 accession. The names of popular people who lived in this time are still famous: Napoleon and Josephine, Juliette Récamier, Jane Austen, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Lord Byron, Beau Brummell, Lady Emma Hamilton, Queen Louise of Prussia and her husband and many more. Beau Brummell introduced trousers, perfect tailoring, and unadorned, immaculate linen as the ideals of men's fashion.

In Germany, republican city-states relinquished their traditional, modest, and practical garments and started to embrace the French and English fashion trends of short-sleeved chemise dresses and Spencer jackets.[6] American fashion trends emulated French dress, but in a toned-down manner, with shawls and tunics to cope with the sheerness of the chemise.[7] Spanish majos, however, rebelled against foppish French Enlightenment ideals by reclaiming and elaborating upon traditional Spanish dress.[8]

By the end of the eighteenth century, a major shift in fashion was taking place that extended beyond changes in mere style to changes in philosophical and social ideals. Prior to this time, the style and traditions of the Ancien Régime prevented the conceptualization of "the self". Instead, one's identity was considered malleable; subject to change depending on what clothes one was wearing. However, by the 1780s, the new, "natural" style allowed one's inner self to transcend their clothes.[9]

During the 1790s, there was a new concept of the internal and external self. Before this time, there had only been one self, which was expressed through clothing. When going to a masquerade ball, people wore specific clothing, so they could not show their individuality through their clothing.[9] Incorporated in this new "natural" style was the importance of ease and comfort of one's dress. Not only was there a new emphasis on hygiene, but also clothing became much lighter and more able to be changed and washed frequently. Even upper-class women began wearing cropped dresses as opposed to dresses with long trains or hoops that restricted them from leaving their homes. The subsequent near stasis of the silhouette inspired volumes of new trims and details on heavily trimmed skirts back into fashion. In the Regency years, complicated historic and orientalist elements provided lavish stylistic displays as such details were a vigorous vehicle for conspicuous consumption given their labor-intensive fabrications, and therefore a potent signifier of hierarchy for the upper classes who wore the styles. This kind of statement was particularly noticeable in profuse trimmings, especially on skirts where unrestrained details were common, along with cut edge details and edge trims.

Women's fashion was also influenced by male fashion, such as tailored waistcoats and jackets to emphasize women's mobility. This new movement toward practicality of dress showed that dress became less of a way to solely categorize between classes or genders; dress was meant to suit one's personal daily routine.[10] It was also during this time period that the fashion magazine and journal industry began to take off. They were most often monthly (often competing) periodicals that allowed men and women to keep up with the ever-changing styles.[11]

Influence of the Industrial Revolution

 
Fashion Plate (The Russian & Prussian Bonnet & Pelisse), published in La Belle Assemblée, July 1, 1814

In the late 18th century, clothes were mostly sold by individual shopkeepers who were often the artisans who made the goods. Customers usually lived in the same neighborhood as the shops and the shops would gain popularity by their customers' word-of–mouth recommendation, with the exception of warehouses (i.e., any retail on wholesale), where goods being sold were not necessarily made in the shop.[12] However, things started to change during the transition to the 19th century. People sought efficiency and variety; under the influence of the Industrial Revolution, improved transportation and introduction of machines in manufacturing allowed fashion to develop at an even faster pace.

The first sewing machine emerged in 1790, and later, Josef Madersperger began developing his first sewing machine in 1807, presenting his first working machine in 1814. The introduction of the sewing machine sped up garment production.[12] However, it had no widespread social impact until the 1840s, and clothing was entirely made by hand in the period to 1820. Meanwhile, advanced spinning, weaving and cotton-printing techniques developed in the 18th century had already brought cheaper, widely available washable fabrics. These durable and affordable fabrics became popular among the larger population. These techniques were further developed by the introduction of machines. Before, accessories like embroidery and lace were manufactured on a small and limited scale by skilled craftsmen and sold in their own shops; in 1804, a machine for embroidering was constructed by John Duncan, and people started producing these essential accessories in factories and dispatching the products to shops throughout the country. These technical developments in clothing production allowed a greater variety of styles; rapid changes in fashion also became possible.[12]

The Industrial Revolution bridged Europe and America with regards to travel. When Louis Simond first arrived in America, he was struck by the mobility of the population and frequency of people made trips to the capital, writing "you meet nowhere with those persons who never were out of their native place, and whose habits are wholly local — nobody above poverty who has not visited London once in his life; and most of those who can, visit once a year.'[12] New canals and railways not only transported people, but created national and even broader markets by transporting goods manufactured in factories at great distances. The rise of industry throughout the Western world increased garment production and people were encouraged to travel more widely and purchase more goods than ever before.[13]

Communication was also improved in this era. New ideas about fashion were conveyed by little dolls dressed in the latest style, newspapers, and illustrated magazines;[14] for example, La Belle Assemblée, founded by John Bell, was a British women's magazine published from 1806 to 1837. It was known for its fashion plates of contemporary fashions, demonstrating ways for women to dress and create ensembles.[15]

Changes in fashion

1790s:

  • Women: "age of undress";[7] dressing like statues coming to life;[16] Greek fashion started to inspire the current fashion, and fillet-Greek classical hairstyles and high waisted clothing with a more triangular hem started to find its way; pastel fabrics; natural makeup; bare arms; blonde wigs; accessorized with: hats, turbans, gloves, jewelry, small handbags – reticules, shawls, handkerchiefs;[6] parasols; fans; Maja: layered skirt
  • Men: trousers w. perfect tailoring; linen; coats cutaway in the front w. long tails; cloaks; hats; the Dandy; Majo: short jacket

1800s:

  • Women: short hair; white hats;[7] trim, feathers, lace; Egyptian and Eastern influences in jewelry and apparel; shawls; hooded-overcoats; hair: masses of curls, sometimes pulled back into a bun
  • Men: linen shirts w. high collars; tall hats; hair: short and wigless, à la Titus or Bedford Crop, but often with some long locks left coming down

1810s:

  • Women: soft, subtle, sheer classical drapes; raised back waist of high-waisted dresses; short-fitted single-breasted jackets;[6] morning dress; walking dress; evening dress; riding habits; bare bosoms and arms; hair: parted in the center, tight ringlets over the ears[17]
  • Men: fitted, single-breasted tailcoats; cravats wrapped up to the chin; sideburns and "Brutus style"[6] natural hair; tight breeches; silk stockings; accessorized with: gold watches, cane, hats outside.

1820s:

  • Women: dress waistlines began to drop; elaborate hem and neckline decoration; cone-shaped skirts; sleeves pinched
  • Men: overcoats/greatcoats w. fur or velvet collars; the Garrick coat;[18] Wellington boots; jockey boots

Women's fashion

 
1811 dance dress
 
In Spain, some society ladies rebelled against French fashion by dressing as majas, like Doña Isabel de Porcel, 1805.

Overview

In this period, fashionable women's clothing styles were based on a high, under the bust waistline, only called the Empire silhouette in the 20th century — dresses were closely fitted to the torso just under the bust, falling loosely below. In different contexts, such styles are now commonly called "Directoire style" (referring to the Directory government of France during the second half of the 1790s), "Empire style" (referring to Napoleon's 1804–1814/1815 empire, and often also to his 1800–1804 "consulate"), or "Regency" (loosely used to refer to various periods between the 18th century and the Victorian).[19] Empire silhouette and Directoire style were not used at the time these styles were worn.[20]

These 1795–1820 fashions were quite different from the styles prevalent during most of the 18th century and the rest of the 19th century when women's clothes were generally tight against the torso from the natural waist upwards, and heavily full-skirted below (often inflated by means of hoop skirts, crinolines, panniers, bustles, etc.). Women's fashion around this time started to follow classical ideals, inspired by the ancient Greek and Roman style with its gracious, loosely falling dresses that were gathered or just accentuated over the natural waist under the bust. For women, heavily boned stays gave way to a celebration of the natural form.[20] Bodices were short with waistlines falling just below the bust. Fashion fabrics such as cotton muslin were light to the point of being sheer, however, printed heavier cottons, wools and other textiles were also popular.[21]

Gowns

Inspired by neoclassical tastes, 'undress' was the style of the day, casual and informal. It was the type of gown a woman wore from morning until noon or later depending on her social engagements of the day. The short-waisted dresses sported soft, loose skirts and were often made of white, almost transparent muslin, which was easily washed and draped loosely like the garments on Greek and Roman statues. Since the fabric clung to the body, revealing what was underneath, it made nudity à la grecque a centerpiece of public spectacle. Satin was sometimes worn for evening wear.[22] 'Half Dress' is thought of as how one would dress when going out during the day or meeting with guests.' Full Dress' was what a lady wore to formal events, day or night. 'Evening Dress' was only appropriate at evening affairs. Thus during the 1795–1820 period, it was often possible for middle- and upper-class women to wear clothes that were not very confining or cumbersome, and still be considered decently and fashionably dressed.

Among middle- and upper-class women there was a basic distinction between morning dress (worn at home in the afternoons as well as mornings) and evening attire — generally, both men and women changed clothes in preparation for the evening meal and possible entertainments to follow. There were also further gradations such as afternoon dress, walking dress, riding habits, traveling dress, dinner dress, etc.

In the Mirror of Graces; or the English Lady's Costume, published in London in 1811, the author ("a Lady of Distinction") advised:

In the morning the arms and bosom must be completely covered to the throat and wrists. From the dinner-hour to the termination of the day, the arms, to a graceful height above the elbow, may be bare; and the neck and shoulders unveiled as far as delicacy will allow.[23]

  • Mourning dresses were worn to show the mourning of a loved one. They were high-necked and long-sleeved, covering throat and wrists, generally plain and black, and devoid of decoration.
  • Gowns (now restricted to formal occasions) were often extravagantly trimmed and decorated with lace, ribbons, and netting. They were cut low and sported short sleeves, baring bosoms. Bared arms were covered by long white gloves. Our Lady of Distinction, however, cautions young women from displaying their bosoms beyond the boundaries of decency, saying, "The bosom and shoulders of a very young and fair girl may be displayed without exciting much displeasure or disgust."

A Lady of Distinction also advised young ladies to wear softer shades of color, such as pinks, periwinkle blue, or lilacs. The mature matron could wear fuller colors, such as purple, black, crimson, deep blue, or yellow.

Many women of this era remarked upon how being fully dressed meant the bosom and shoulders were bare, and yet being under-dressed would mean one's neckline went right up to one's chin.[citation needed]

Silhouette

Due to the importance of showing social status, the fashion industry was very much influenced by society during the Regency era. One's position was determined by the person's wealth, etiquette, family status, intelligence, and beauty. Women financially and socially relied on their husbands. The only socially-acceptable activities in which women could participate centered around social gatherings and fashion, the most important component of which was attending evening parties. These parties helped to build relationships and connection with others. As etiquette dictated different standards of attire for different events, afternoon dress, evening dress, evening full dress, ball dress, and different types of dresses were popular.

Women's fashion in the Regency era started to change drastically. It popularized the empire silhouette, which featured a fitted bodice and high waist. This "new natural style" emphasized the beauty of the body's natural lines. Clothing became lighter and easier to care for than in the past. Women often wore several layers of clothing, typically undergarments, gowns, and outerwear. The chemise, the standard undergarment of the era, prevented the thin, gauzy dresses from being fully transparent. Outerwear, such as the spencer and the pelisse, were popular.

The empire silhouette was created in the late 18th century to about the early 19th century and referred to the period of the First French Empire. This adoption had been linked with France's neoclassical taste for Greek principles. In fact, however, its genealogy is much more complex. It was first worn by the French queen, whose reference was Caribbean, not Greek.[24] The style was often worn in white to denote as high social status. Josephine Bonaparte was one of the figureheads for the Empire waistline, with her elaborated and decorated Empire line dresses. Regency women followed the Empire style along with the same trend of raised waistlines as French styles, even when their countries were at war. Starting from the 1780s and early 1790s, women's silhouette became slimmer and the waistlines crept up. After 1795, waistlines rose dramatically and the skirt circumference was further reduced. A few years later, England and France started to show the focus of the high waist style and this led to the creation of Empire style.

 
French lady in 1808; the style was often accompanied by a shawl or similar wrap, or a short "Spencer" jacket, as the dresses were light and left much uncovered

The style began as part of Neoclassical fashion, reviving styles from Greco-Roman art which showed women wearing loose-fitting rectangular tunics known as peplos which were belted under the bust, providing support for women and a cool, comfortable outfit especially in a warm climate. The empire silhouette was defined by the waistline, which was positioned directly under the bust. The Empire silhouette was the key style in women's clothing during the Regency era. The dresses were usually light, long, and fit loosely, they were usually in white and often sheer from the ankle to just below the bodice which strongly emphasized thin hem and tied around the body. A long rectangular shawl or wrap, very often plain red but with a decorated border in portraits, helped in colder weather and was apparently lain around the midriff when seated—for which sprawling semi-recumbent postures were favored. The dresses had a fitted bodice and it gave a high-waist appearance.

The style had waxed and waned in fashion for hundreds of years. The shape of the dresses also helped to lengthen the body's appearance. The clothing can also be draped to maximize the bust. Lightweight fabrics were typically used to create a flowing effect. Also, ribbon, sash, and other decorative features were used to highlight the waistline. The empire gowns were often with a low neckline and short sleeves and women usually wore them as for formal occasions. On the other hand, day dresses had a higher neckline and long sleeves. The chemisette was a staple for fashionable ladies. Although there were now differences between dresses and gowns, the high waistline was not changed.

Hairstyles and headgear

 
Miniature portrait of a Russian lady, Russian school, c. 1800
 
Portrait of Caroline Murat and her daughter Letizia, painted in 1807 by Elisabeth Vigée-Lebrun. Madame Murat wears the formal red train of court dress over her high-waisted gown.

During this period, the classical influence extended to hairstyles. Often masses of curls were worn over the forehead and ears, with the longer back hair drawn up into loose buns or Psyche knots influenced by Greek and Roman styles. By the later 1810s, front hair was parted in the center and worn in tight ringlets over the ears.[17] Adventurous women like Lady Caroline Lamb wore short cropped hairstyles "à la Titus", the Journal de Paris reporting in 1802 that "more than half of elegant women were wearing their hair or wig à la Titus", a layered cut usually with some tresses hanging down.[25]

In the Mirror of Graces, a Lady of Distinction writes,

Now, easy tresses, the shining braid, the flowing ringlet confined by the antique comb, or bodkin, give graceful specimens of the simple taste of modern beauty. Nothing can correspond more elegantly with the untrammeled drapery of our newly-adopted classic raiment than this undecorated coiffure of nature.[26]

Conservative married women continued to wear linen mob caps, which now had wider brims at the sides to cover the ears. Fashionable women wore similar caps for morning (at home undress) wear.[27]

For the first time in centuries, respectable but daringly fashionable women would leave the house without a hat or bonnet, previously something often associated with prostitutes. However, most women continued to wear something on their head outdoors, though they were beginning to cease to do so indoors during the day (as well as for evening wear). The antique head-dress, or Queen Mary coif, Chinese hat, Oriental-inspired turban, and Highland helmet were popular. As for bonnets, their crowns and brims were adorned with increasingly elaborate ornamentations, such as feathers and ribbons.[28] In fact, ladies of the day embellished their hats frequently, replacing old decorations with new trims or feathers.

Undergarments

 
1811 illustration of underclothes, showing one form of Regency "stays"

Fashionable women of the Regency era wore several layers of undergarments. The first was the chemise, or shift, a thin garment with tight, short sleeves (and a low neckline if worn under evening wear), made of white cotton and finished with a plain hem that was shorter than the dress. These shifts were meant to protect the outer-clothes from perspiration and were washed more frequently than outer clothes. In fact, washerwomen of the time used coarse soap when scrubbing these garments, then plunged them in boiling water, hence the absence of color, lace, or other embellishments, which would have faded or damaged the fabric under such rough treatment. Chemises and shifts also prevented the transparent muslin or silk dresses from being too revealing.

The next layer was a pair of stays or corset (more lightly boned). While high-waisted classical fashions required no corset for the slight of figure, most ordinary women still wore some kind of bust support, although the aim was to look as if they were not.[29] The disappearance of the corset or stays has been much exaggerated by writers on the Regency period. There were some experiments to produce garments which would serve the same functions as a modern brassiere.[30][31][32][33] (In the Mirror of Graces, a "divorce" was described as an undergarment that served to separate a woman's breasts. Made of steel or iron that was covered by a type of padding, and shaped like a triangle, this device was placed in the center of the chest.[34]) "Short stays" (corsets extending only a short distance below the breasts) were often worn over the shift or chemise (not directly next to the skin), and "long stays" (corsets extending down towards the natural waist) were worn by women trying to appear slimmer than they were or who needed more support. The English wore these more than the French, but even such long stays were not primarily intended to constrict the waist, in the manner of Victorian corsets.

The final layer was the petticoat, which was the name for any skirt worn under the gown and could be a skirt with a bodice, a skirt attached over the torso by tapes, or a separate skirt.[35] These petticoats were often worn between the underwear and the outer dress and were considered part of the outer clothing, not underwear. The lower edge of the petticoat was intended to be seen since women would often lift their outer dresses to spare the relatively delicate material of the outer dress from mud or damp (so exposing only the coarser and cheaper fabric of the petticoat to risk). Often exposed to view, petticoats were decorated at the hem with rows of tucks or lace, or ruffles.

"Drawers" (large, flowy 'shorts' with buttons at the crotch) were only occasionally worn at this time.[36] Women had no underwear under their dresses.

Stockings (hosiery), made of silk or knitted cotton, were held up by garters below the knee until suspenders were introduced in the late 19th century and were often of a white or pale flesh color.[37]

Outerwear and shoes

 
Leather slippers,between 1795 and 1805.

During this time period, women's clothing was much thinner than in the eighteenth century some warmer outerwear became important in fashion, especially in colder climates. Coat-like garments such as pelisses and redingotes were popular, as were shawls, mantles, mantelets, capes, and cloaks. The mantelet was a short cape that was eventually lengthened and made into a shawl. The redingote, another popular example, was a full-length garment resembling a man's riding coat (hence the name) in style, that could be made of different fabrics and patterns.[7] Throughout the period, the Indian shawl was the favored wrap,[38] as houses and the typical English country house were generally draughty, and the sheer muslin and light silk dresses popular during this time provided less protection. Shawls were made of soft cashmere or silk or even muslin for summer. Paisley patterns were extremely popular at the time.[39]

Short (high-waisted) jackets called spencers[38] were worn outdoors, along with long-hooded cloaks, Turkish wraps, mantles, capes, Roman tunics, chemisettes, and overcoats called pelisses[40] (which were often sleeveless and reached down as far as the ankles). These outer garments were often made of double sarsnet, fine Merino cloth, or velvets, and trimmed with furs, such as swan's down, fox, chinchilla, or sable. On May 6, 1801, Jane Austen wrote her sister Cassandra, "Black gauze cloaks are worn as much as anything."[41]

Thin, flat fabric (silk or velvet), or leather slippers were generally worn (as opposed to the high-heeled shoes of much of the 18th century).

Metal pattens were strapped on shoes to protect them from rain or mud, raising the feet an inch or so off the ground.

Accessories

 
ca. 1813

Gloves were always worn by women outside the house. When worn inside, as when making a social call, or on formal occasions, such as a ball, they were removed when dining.[42] About the length of the glove, A Lady of Distinction writes:

If the prevailing fashion be to reject the long sleeve, and to partially display the arm, let the glove advance considerably above the elbow, and there be fastened with a draw-string or armlet. But this should only be the case when the arm is muscular, coarse, or scraggy. When it is fair, smooth, and round, it will admit of the glove being pushed down to a little above the wrists.[43]

Longer gloves were worn rather loosely during this period, crumpling below the elbow. As described in the passage above, "garters" could fasten longer gloves.

Reticules held personal items, such as vinaigrettes. The form-fitting dresses or frocks of the day had no pockets, thus these small drawstring handbags were essential. These handbags were often called buskins or balantines. They were rectangular in shape and was worn suspended by a woven band from a belt placed around the figure above the waist.[44]

Parasols (as shown in the illustration) protected a lady's skin from the sun and were considered an important fashion accessory. Slender and light in weight, they came in a variety of shapes, colors, and sizes.

Fashionable ladies (and gentlemen) used fans to cool themselves and to enhance gestures and body language. Made of paper or silk on sticks of ivory and wood, and printed with oriental motifs or popular scenes of the era, these ubiquitous accessories featured a variety of shapes and styles, such as pleated or rigid. An information sheet from the Cheltenham Museum describes fans and their use in body language and communication (click and scroll to page 4).[45]

Directoire (1795–1799)

 
 
An idealized classicized depiction of an English Regency domestic scene

By the mid-1790s, neoclassical clothing had come into fashion in France.[46] Several influences had combined to bring about this simplification in women's clothing: aspects of Englishwomen's practical country outdoor-wear leaked up into French high fashion, and there was a reaction in revolutionary France against the stiffly boned corsets and brightly colored satins and other heavy fabrics that were in style in the Ancien Régime (see 1750–1795 in fashion). But ultimately, Neo-classicism was adopted for its association with classical republican ideas [with reference to Greece, rather than republican Rome, which was now considered politically dangerous].[46] This renewed fascination of the classical past was encouraged by the recent discoveries of Pompeii and Herculaneum, and would likely have not been possible outside such a specific geographic and historical setting that allowed the idea of the past made present to become paramount.[47]

Along with the influences of the Pompeii and Herculaneum excavations, several other factors came together to popularize neoclassical dress. Starting in the early 1790s, Emma Hamilton began her performances of attitudes, something that was considered by contemporaries as entirely new. These attitudes were based loosely on the ancient practice of pantomime, though Emma's performances lacked masks and musical accompaniment.[47] Her performances created a fusion between art and nature; art came alive and her body became a type of art.[16] As an aid to her performances of tragic mythological and historical figures, Emma wore the clothing á la grecque that would become popular in mainstream France in the coming years. A simple light-colored chemise made from thin, flowing material was worn and gathered with a narrow ribbon under the breasts. Simple cashmere shawls were used as headdresses or to give more fullness to the drapery of the chemise. They also helped to prevent broken lines in the performance so that the outstretched arms were always connected with the body, escalating the effect of fluid movement, and oftentimes, a cape or a cloak was worn to emphasize the lines of the body in certain poses. This highlighted the continuity of surface of line and form in the body of the performer to emphasize the unity, simplicity, and continuously flowing movement from one part of the body to the next. The hair was worn in a natural, loose, and flowing fashion. All of these properties blended together to allow an extensive play of light and shadow to reveal and accent certain parts of the body during the performance while covering others.[16] Emma was highly capable in her attitudes, and the influence of her dress spread from Naples to Paris as wealthy Parisians took the Grand Tour.

 
A satirical 1796 contrast between old Elizabethan and Directoire clothing styles: Too Much and Too Little, reads the caption of this caricature by Isaac Cruikshank

There is also some evidence that the white muslin shift dress became popular after Thermidor through the influence of prison dress. Revolutionary women such as Madame Tallien portrayed themselves in this way because it was the only clothing they possessed during their time in prison. The chemise á la grecque also represented the struggle for representation of the self and the stripping down of past cultural values.[48] Also, a simplification of the attire worn by preteen girls in the 1780s (who were no longer required to wear miniature versions of adult stays and panniers) probably paved the way for the simplification of the attire worn by teenage girls and adult women in the 1790s. Waistlines became somewhat high by 1795, but skirts were still rather full, and neoclassical influences were not yet dominant.

It was during the second half of the 1790s that fashionable women in France began to adopt a thoroughgoing Classical style, based on an idealized version of ancient Greek and Roman dress (or what was thought at the time to be ancient Greek and Roman dress), with narrow clinging skirts. Some of the extreme Parisian versions of the neoclassical style (such as narrow straps which bared the shoulders, and diaphanous dresses without sufficient stays, petticoats, or shifts worn beneath) were not widely adopted elsewhere, but many features of the late-1790s neoclassical style were broadly influential, surviving in successively modified forms in European fashions over the next two decades.

With this Classical style came the willingness to expose the breast. With the new iconography of the Revolution as well as a change in emphasis on maternal breast-feeding, the chemise dress became a sign of the new egalitarian society.[49] The style was simple and appropriate for the comfort of a pregnant or nursing woman as the breasts were emphasized and their availability was heightened. Maternity became fashionable and it was not uncommon for women to walk around with their breasts exposed. Some women took the "fashionable maternity" a step further and wore a "six-month pad" under their dress to appear pregnant.[50]

White was considered the most suitable color for neoclassical clothing (accessories were often in contrasting colors). Short trains trailing behind were common in dresses of the late 1790s.

Directoire gallery

  1. This portrait of the Frankland sisters by John Hoppner gives an idea of the styles of 1795.
  2. "Ruth entreating Naomi and Orpah to return to the land of Moab" by William Blake. Blake is not a typical neo-classicist, but this shows a somewhat similar idealization of antiquity (as well as predicting the future high fashions of the late 1790s). The particular image was composed in 1795 and is currently held by the Fitzwilliam Museum.[51]
  3. Leipzig fashion plate showing woman and girl wearing elegantly simple high-waisted styles, which are not strongly neoclassical, however.
  4. Portrait of Gabrielle Josephine du Pont.
  5. 1798 picture, showing a lady who seems none too warmly attired for a balloon journey in her low-cut thin-looking Directoire dress.
  6. Fashion plate of white Directoire dress worn with contrasting red shawl with a Greek key border.
  7. A 1798 sketch of a day outfit with short "spencer" jacket (less neoclassical, though still following the empire silhouette).
  8. Marie-Denise Villers wears an almost transparent white dress.
  9. Gertrud Hage wears a white transparent dress over a white petticoat.
  10. Riding habits of 1799. The habit on the right features a short jacket with tails. The green habit on the left may be a redingote rather than a jacket and petticoat.
Caricatures
  1. "TOO MUCH and TOO LITTLE, or Summer Clothing of 1556 & 1796", a February 8, 1796, caricature engraved by Isaac Cruikshank (father of George) after a drawing by George M. Woodward. (In 1796, strongly neoclassically influenced styles were still very new in England.) Notice the single vertical feather springing from the hair of the 1796 woman.
  2. "Tippies of 1796", a highly stylized parody which caricatures women's feather headdresses and dandies' tight trousers, among other things.
  3. "The gallery of fashion" satirizes early neo-classical influenced fashions.
  4. "Parisian ladies in their full winter dress", an over-the-top caricature by Isaac Cruikshank of allegedly excessively diaphanous styles worn in late 1790s Paris.
  5. "A French Invasion on the Fashionable Dress of 1798," British caricature, also showing tight trousers, wigs, and square neckline.
  6. "Monstrosities of 1799".

Empire (1800–1815)

 
English and French fashions, 1815. The morning dress has back gathers and long sleeves, and like the walking costume, has trim at the hemline and new detail at the upper sleeve.

During the first two decades of the 19th century, fashions continued to follow the basic high-waisted empire silhouette, but in other respects, neoclassical influences became progressively diluted. Dresses remained narrow in the front, but fullness at the raised back waist allowed room to walk. Colors other than white came into style, the fad for diaphanous outer fabrics faded (except in certain formal contexts), and some elements of obviously visible ornamentation came back into use in the design of the dress (as opposed to the elegant simplicity or subtle white-on-white embroidery of the dress of ca. 1800).

Empire gallery

  1. Dolley Madison wears a short sleeved, light-pink dress with a high waistline. She also wears a thin, chain necklace, a golden-colored shawl, and her hair in a bun with loose waves; the simplicity, yet elegance, of her attire, is typical of the era.
  2. 1804 French painting by Marguerite Gérard showing two different dresses, one more elaborate than the other. Note the low neckline then in fashion.
  3. Paris Fashion of 1804. Note the even more generous neckline.
  4. Conservative fashion: Mob cap of c. 1805 is pleated in the front and has a narrow frilled brim that widens to cover the ears. America.
  5. Morning dress: Cotton Morning dress c. 1806.
  6. Mrs. Harrison Gray Otis wears a dress with a sheer top layer over a partial lining and a patterned shawl. She wears a gold armlet on her left arm. Her hair is styled in loose waves at the temples and over her ears. Massachusetts, 1809.
  7. 1809 gown worn with elbow-length gloves.
  8. 1810 gown, shown with elbow-length gloves.
  9. 1810 sketch of a woman in "Schute" bonnet and blue-striped dress with flounces.
  10. Portrait of a woman by Henri Mulard, ca. 1810.
  11. Fashion plate of a panniered English court gown, 1810.
  12. Marguerite-Charlotte David wears a simple white satin gown and the ubiquitous shawl. Her headdress is trimmed with ostrich plumes.
Caricatures
  1. "The Fashions of the Day, or Time Past and Present", a caricature purporting to show the provocative and revealing character of 1807 fashions as compared to those of the 18th century (deliberately exaggerating the contrast).
  2. "Three Graces in a High Wind", 1810 caricature by Gillray. A satire of clinging dresses worn with few layers of petticoats beneath.
  3. "Almack's Longitude and Latitude", 1813 caricature by George Cruikshank.

Regency (1815–1820) gallery

This era signaled the loss of any lingering neoclassical, pseudo-Grecian styles in women's dress. This decline was especially evident in France due to the Emperor Napoleon's suppression of trade in the fabrics used in neoclassical dress.[52] While waistlines were still high, they were beginning to drop slightly. Larger and more abundant decoration, especially near the hem and neckline foreshadowed greater extravagance in the coming years. More petticoats were being worn, and a stiffer, more cone-shaped skirt became popular. Stiffness could be supplemented by layers of ruffles and tucks on a hem, as well as corded or flounced petticoats. Sleeves began to be pulled, tied, and pinched in ways that were more influenced by romantic and gothic styles than neoclassical. Hats and hairstyles became more elaborate and trimmed, climbing higher to balance widening skirts.

  1. 1815 walking costume
  2. 1816 day dresses
  3. Comtesse Vilain and her daughter wear their hair parted in the front center with tight ringlets over each ear; back hair is brushed back into a bun. 1816.
  4. Countess Thekla Ludolf wears a red dress over a white chemise. 1816.
  5. 1817 dancing illustration, showing the beginning of the trend towards a conical silhouette.
  6. 1817 walking costume is heavily trimmed and tasseled.
  7. 1818 gown
  8. Mary Lodge wears the new fashion for rich color. Her crimson gown with frills at neck and sleeves is worn with an ivory shawl with a wide paisley-patterned border, 1818.
  9. 1818 gown
  10. 1819 gown, with ornamentation near the hem.
  11. "Morning dress" (for staying inside the house during the mornings and early afternoons), 1819.

Caricature

  1. "Monstrosities of 1818", a satire by George Cruikshank of the female trend towards a conical silhouette, and male high cravats and dandyism.
  2. "A peep at the French Monstrosities", a French fashion satire by George Cruikshank.

Russian fashion

Spanish fashion

Men's fashion

 
Pierre Seriziat in riding dress, 1795. His snug leather breeches have a tie and buttons at the knee and a fall front. The white waistcoat is double-breasted, a popular style at this time. His tall hat is slightly conical.
 
Artist Jean-Baptiste Isabey wears a cropped riding coat and dark breeches tucked into boots. He carries his hat and gloves, 1795.
 
A Directoire dandy in 1797, by Girodet; Portrait of Jean-Baptiste Belley, Deputy for Saint-Domingue.
 
This gentleman wears a double-breasted frockcoat in dark blue over a buff waistcoat. His gray trousers have straps under his shoes. His slightly conical tall hat sits in the windowsill, Germany, c. 1815 (by Georg Friedrich Kersting).

Overview

This period saw the final abandonment of lace, embroidery, and other embellishments from serious men's clothing outside of formalized court dress—it would not reappear except as an affectation of Aesthetic dress in the 1880s and its successor, the "Young Edwardian" look of the 1960s. Instead, cut and tailoring became much more important as an indicator of quality.[18] This transformation can be attributed in part to an increased interest in antiquity stemming from the discovery of classical engravings, including the Elgin Marbles. The figures depicted in classical art were viewed as an exemplar of the ideal natural form, and an embodiment of Neoclassical ideas. The style in London for men became more and more refined and this was due to the influence of two things: the dandy and the romantic movement. The dandy (a man who placed high importance on personal aesthetics and hobbies but wanted to seem totally nonchalant about it) arguably emerged as early as the 1790s. Dark colors were all but mandatory. (Dark doesn't necessarily mean dreary though; many items, particularly vests and coats were cut from rich, vivid fabrics.) Blue tailcoats with gold buttons were everywhere. White muslin shirts (sometimes with ruffles on the neck/sleeves) were extremely popular. Breeches were officially on their way out, with pants/trousers taking their place. Fabrics in general were becoming more practical silk and more wool, cotton, and buckskin.[53] Therefore, in the 18th century, the dress was simplified and greater emphasis was put on tailoring to enhance the natural form of the body.[54]

This was also the period of the rise of hair wax for styling men's hair, as well as mutton chops as a style of facial hair.

Breeches became longer—tightly fitted leather riding breeches reached almost to the boot tops—and were replaced by pantaloons or trousers for fashionable streetwear. The French Revolution is largely responsible for altering the standard male dress. During the revolution, clothing symbolized the division between the upper classes and the working-class revolutionaries. French rebels earned the nickname sans-culottes, or "the people without breeches," because of the loose floppy trousers they popularized.[55]

Coats were cutaway in front with long skirts or tails behind, and had tall standing collars. Lapels were not as large as they had been in years before and often featured an M-shaped notch unique to the period.[18]

Shirts were made of linen, had attached collars, and were worn with stocks or wrapped in a cravat tied in various fashions. Pleated frills at the cuffs and the front opening went out of fashion by the end of the period.[18]

Waistcoats were high-waisted, and squared off at the bottom, but came in a broad variety of styles. They were often double-breasted, with wide lapels and stand collars. Around 1805 large lapels that overlapped those of the jacket began to fall out of fashion, as did the 18th-century tradition of wearing the coat unbuttoned, and gradually waistcoats became less visible. Shortly before this time waistcoats were commonly vertically striped but by 1810 plain white waistcoats were increasingly fashionable, as did horizontally striped waistcoats. High-collared waistcoats were fashionable until 1815, then collars were gradually lowered as the shawl collar came into use toward the end of this period.[18]

Overcoats or greatcoats were fashionable, often with contrasting collars of fur or velvet. The garrick, sometimes called a coachman's coat, was a particularly popular style, and had between three and five short caplets attached to the collar.[18]

Boots, typically Hessian boots with heart-shaped tops and tassels were a mainstay in men's footwear. After the Duke of Wellington defeated Napoleon at Waterloo in 1815, Wellington boots, as they were known, became the rage; tops were knee-high in front and cut lower in back. The jockey boot, with a turned-down cuff of lighter colored leather, had previously been popular but continued to be worn for riding.[56] Court shoes with elevated heels became popular with the introduction of trousers.

The rise of the dandy

The clothes-obsessed dandy first appeared in the 1790s, both in London and Paris. In the slang of the time, a dandy was differentiated from a fop in that the dandy's dress was more refined and sober. The dandy prided himself in "natural excellence" and tailoring allowed for exaggeration of the natural figure beneath fashionable outerwear.[57]

In High Society: A Social History of the Regency Period, 1788–1830, Venetia Murray writes:

Other admirers of dandyism have taken the view that it is a sociological phenomenon, the result of a society in a state of transition or revolt. Barbey d'Aurevilly, one of the leading French dandies at the end of the nineteenth century, explained:

"Some have imagined that dandyism is primarily a specialisation in the art of dressing oneself with daring and elegance. It is that, but much else as well. It is a state of mind made up of many shades, a state of mind produced in old and civilised societies where gaiety has become infrequent or where conventions rule at the price of their subject's boredom...it is the direct result of the endless warfare between respectability and boredom."

In Regency London dandyism was a revolt against a different kind of tradition, an expression of distaste for the extravagance and ostentation of the previous generation, and of sympathy with the new mood of democracy.[58]

Beau Brummell set the fashion for dandyism in British society from the mid-1790s, which was characterized by immaculate personal cleanliness, immaculate linen shirts with high collars, perfectly tied cravats, and exquisitely tailored plain dark coats[18] (contrasting in many respects with the "maccaroni" of the earlier 18th century).

Brummell abandoned his wig and cut his hair short in a Roman fashion dubbed à la Brutus, echoing the fashion for all things classical seen in women's wear of this period. He also led the move from breeches to snugly tailored pantaloons or trousers, often light-colored for day and dark for the evening, based on working-class clothing adopted by all classes in France in the wake of the Revolution. In fact, Brummel's reputation for taste and refinement was such that, fifty years after his death, Max Beerbohm, wrote:

In certain congruities of dark cloth, in the rigid perfection of his linen, in the symmetry of his glove with his hand, lay the secret of Mr Brummell's miracles.

Not every male aspiring to attain Brummel's sense of elegance and style succeeded, however, and these dandies were subject to caricature and ridicule. Venetia Murray quotes an excerpt from Diary of an Exquisite, from The Hermit in London, 1819:

Took four hours to dress; and then it rained; ordered the tilbury and my umbrella, and drove to the fives' court; next to my tailors; put him off after two years tick; no bad fellow that Weston...broke three stay-laces and a buckle, tore the quarter of a pair of shoes, made so thin by O'Shaughnessy, in St. James's Street, that they were light as brown paper; what a pity they were lined with pink satin, and were quite the go; put on a pair of Hoby's; over-did it in perfuming my handkerchief, and had to recommence de novo; could not please myself in tying my cravat; lost three quarters of an hour by that, tore two pairs of kid gloves in putting them hastily on; was obliged to go gently to work with the third; lost another quarter of an hour by this; drove off furiously in my chariot but had to return for my splendid snuff-box, as I knew that I should eclipse the circle by it.[58]

Hairstyles and headgear

 
The three Consuls of French Republic in 1799-1804 : (L-R) Jean-Jacques-Régis de Cambacérès (1753-1824), Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821), and Charles-François Lebrun (1739-1824). While the older ones, Cambacérès and Lebrun, wear old-fashioned powdered wigs, younger Napoleon wears a fashionable short unpowdered hairstyle.

The French Revolution (1789-1799) in France and the Pitt's hair powder tax in 1795 in Britain effectively ended the fashion for both wigs and powder in these countries and younger men of fashion in both countries began to wear their own unpowdered hair without a queue in short curls, often with long sideburns. The new styles like the Brutus ("à la Titus") and the Bedford Crop became fashionable and subsequently spread also in other European and European-influenced countries including the United States. Many notable men during this period, especially younger ones, followed this new fashion trend of short unpowdered hairstyles, e.g. Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821), initially wearing long hair tied in a queue, changed his hairstyle and cut his hair short while in Egypt in 1798.[59] Likewise the future U.S. President John Quincy Adams (1767-1848) who had worn a powdered wig and long hair tied in a queue in his youth, abandoned this fashion during this period while serving as the U.S. Minister to Russia (1809-1814)[60] and later became the first president to adopt a short haircut instead of long hair tied in a queue.[61] Older men, military officers, and those in conservative professions such as lawyers, judges, physicians, and servants retained their wigs and powder. Formal court dress of European monarchies also still required a powdered wig or long powdered hair tied in a queue until the accession of Napoleon to the throne as emperor (1804-1814).

Tricorne and bicorne hats were still worn, but the most fashionable hat was tall and slightly conical; this would soon, however, be displaced by the top hat and reign as the only hat for formal occasions for the next century.[62]

Style gallery 1795–1809

  1. Portrait of boxer "Jem" Belcher wearing a patterned cravat and a double-breasted brown coat with a dark (fur or velvet?) collar, c. 1800.
  2. Watercolor of Beau Brummell by Richard Dighton.
  3. In this self-portrait of 1805, Washington Allston wears a tan cravat with his high white collar and dark coat. Boston.
  4. Rubens Peale wears a white waistcoat with a tall upright notched collar over his high shirt collar and wide cravat. America, 1807.
  5. Friedrich von Schiller wears a brown double-breasted coat with a contrasting collar and brass buttons. The pleated frill of his shirt front can be seen next to the knot of his white cravat, Germany, 1808–09.
  6. Chateaubriand has fashionably tousled hair. He wears a long redingote over his coat, tan waistcoat, white shirt, and dark cravat, 1808.
  7. Count Victor Kochubey's collar reaches his chin, and his cravat is wrapped around his neck and tied in a small bow. His short hair is casually dressed and falls over his forehead, 1809.
  8. Portrait of Gwyllym Lloyd Wardle depicts him in a dark coat over a tan waistcoat and high collar and cravat, 1809.
  9. Elaborate embroidery remained a feature of formal court suits like this one, which pairs a red wool coat with a cloth-of-silver waistcoat, both embroidered in silver thread. Italy, c. 1800–1810. Los Angeles County Museum of Art, M.80.60a-b.
  10. Portrait of Danish adventurer Jørgen Jørgensen shows how Scandinavian society has viewed men's fashion in the Age of Revolution.

Style gallery 1810–1820

  1. Les Modernes Incroyables, a satire on French fashions of 1810; long tight breeches or pantaloons, short coats with tails, and massive cravats.
  2. Marcotte d'Argenteuil wears a high-collared shirt with a dark cravat, a buff waistcoat, a double-breasted brown coat with covered buttons, and a dark gray overcoat with contrasting collar (perhaps sealskin). 1810. His bicorne hat lies on the table.
  3. Daniel la Motte, a Baltimore, Maryland, merchant and landowner, strikes a romantic pose that displays details of his white waistcoat, frilled shirt, and fall-front breeches with covered buttons at the knee, 1812–13.
  4. German physician Johann Abraham Albers wears a striped waistcoat under a black double-breasted coat, 1813.
  5. American artist Samuel Lovett Waldo wears a frilled shirt with a knotted white cravat.
  6. Lord Grantham wears a double-breasted coat which shows a bit of the waistcoat beneath at the waist, tight pantaloons tucked into boots, and a high collar and cravat, 1816.
  7. Nicolas-Pierre Tiolier wears a rich blue tailcoat and brown fall-front trousers over a white waistcoat, shirt, and cravat. His tall hat sits on an antique plinth, 1817.
  8. Unknown artist wears a double-breasted tailcoat with turned-back cuffs and a matching high collar of velvet (or possibly fur). Note that, while the man's obvious wasp-like torso is not overly emphasized in a caricature-like fashion, as was often the case in male fashion plates of the day, there is a definite and deliberate nipping of the waist. It is highly likely that the sitter in this portrait wore some sort of tight-laced corset or similar undergarment. The coat-sleeves are puffed at the shoulder. He wears a white waistcoat, shirt, and cravat, and light-colored pantaloons, 1819.

Children's fashion

Both boys and girls wore dresses until they were about four or five years old, when boys were "breeched", or put into trousers.[63]

Revival of Directoire/Empire/Regency fashions

During the first half of the Victorian era, there was a more or less negative view of women's styles of the 1795–1820 period. Some people would have felt slightly uncomfortable to be reminded that their mothers or grandmothers had once promenaded about in such styles (which could be considered indecent according to Victorian norms), and many would have found it somewhat difficult to really empathize with (or take seriously) the struggles of a heroine of art or literature if they were being constantly reminded that she was wearing such clothes. For such reasons, some Victorian history paintings of the Napoleonic wars intentionally avoided depicting accurate women's styles (see example below), Thackeray's illustrations to his book Vanity Fair depicted the women of the 1810s wearing 1840s fashions, and in Charlotte Brontë's 1849 novel Shirley (set in 1811–1812) neo-Grecian fashions are anachronistically relocated to an earlier generation.

Later in the Victorian period, the Regency seemed to retreat to an unthreateningly remote historical distance, and Kate Greenaway and the Artistic Dress movement selectively revived elements of early 19th century fashions. During the late Victorian and Edwardian periods, many genre paintings, sentimental valentines, etc. contained loose depictions of 1795–1820 styles (then considered to be quaint relics of a bygone era). In the late 1960s / early 1970s, there was a limited fashion revival of the Empire silhouette.

In recent years, 1795–1820 fashions are most strongly associated with Jane Austen's writings, due to the various movie adaptations of her novels. There are also some Regency fashion urban myths, such as that women dampened their gowns to make them appear even more diaphanous (something which was certainly not practiced by the vast majority of women of the period).

  1. An 1857 cartoon making fun of the contemporary distaste for early 19th century clothes.
  2. "Before Waterloo" by Henry Nelson O'Neil (1868), a mid-Victorian painting which deliberately does not show accurate women's styles of 1815.
  3. "Two Strings to her Bow" by John Pettie (1882), a later Victorian genre painting which uses the Regency period for nostalgia value.
  4. May Day by Kate Greenaway.

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Aaslestad, Katherine B.: "Sitten und Mode: Fashion, Gender, and Public Identities in Hamburg at the Turn of the Nineteenth Century, Gender in Transition: Discourse and Practice in German-Speaking Europe, University of Michigan Press, 2006.
  2. ^ Aaslestad, Katherine B.: "Sitten und Mode: Fashion, Gender, and Public Identities in Hamburg at the Turn of the Nineteenth Century, Gender in Transition: Discourse and Practice in German-Speaking Europe, University of Michigan Press, 2006, 283.
  3. ^ Ribeiro, Aileen: The Art of Dress: Fashion in England and France 1750–1820, Yale University Press, 1995, ISBN 0-300-06287-7
  4. ^ Four Hundred Years of Fashion, Victoria & Albert Museum, V&A Publications, 1984 p. 31
  5. ^ Yalom, Marilyn, "A History of the Breast." (Knopf: New York, 1997)
  6. ^ a b c d Katherine B. Aaslestad: "Sitten und Mode: Fashion, Gender, and Public Identities in Hamburg at the Turn of the Nineteenth Century, Gender in Transition: Discourse and Practice in German-Speaking Europe, University of Michigan Press, 2006, 282–318.
  7. ^ a b c d Betty-Bright P. Low, "Of Muslins and Merveilleuses," Winterthur Portfolio, vol 9 (1974), 29–75.
  8. ^ Noyes, Dorothy: "La Maja Vestida: Dress as Resistance to Enlightenment in Late 18th-century Madrid," Journal of American Folklore, vol 111, no 440, 1998, 197–217.
  9. ^ a b Dror Warman, The Making of the Modern Self: Identity and Culture in Eighteenth-Century England (Yale University Press, 2004), pp. 166–189, 265–278
  10. ^ Peter McNeil, "The Appearance of Enlightenment: Refashioning the Elites," in The Enlightenment Worlds, eds (Routledge, 2004), pp. 381–400
  11. ^ The, Elizabeth Roslyn. "Women's Fashion: Fashion Plates, Illustrations, and Watercolours from 1790s to 1810s". Retrieved 8 February 2014.
  12. ^ a b c d Ashelford, J. The art of dress: Clothes and society, 1500–1914. National Trust. pp. 195–197.
  13. ^ "Nineteenth-Century Industrialization". Encyclopedia of Fashion.
  14. ^ Arnold, J. Patterns of fashion: The cut and construction of clothes for men and women. Macmillan.
  15. ^ Knowles, R. "La Belle Assemblée". Regency History.
  16. ^ a b c Wurst, Karin A. (2001). "Spellbinding: The Body as Art/Art as Body in the Cultural Practice of Attitüden". Lessing Yearbook 2001. 33: 151–181.
  17. ^ a b Thomas, Pauline. "Regency & Romantic Hairstyles and Hats 1800–1840 Fashion History".
  18. ^ a b c d e f g Payne, Blanche (1965) pp. 452–455
  19. ^ O'Brien, Alden, 'Empire Style', in The Berg Companion to Fashion, ed. by Valerie. Steele (Oxford; New York: Berg, 2010), pp. 247–48
  20. ^ a b Davidson, Hilary, Dress in the Age of Jane Austen: Regency Fashion, Yale University Press, 2019, p. 24
  21. ^ Davidson, Hilary, Dress in the Age of Jane Austen: Regency Fashion, Yale University Press, 2019, p. 81
  22. ^ Grigsby, Darcy G. "Nudity à La Grecque." The Art Bulletin 80.2 (1998): 311–35.
  23. ^ "Mirror of Graces; or the English Lady's Costume". p. 95. Retrieved 4 July 2009.
  24. ^ Lubrich, Naomi (2015). "The Little White Dress: Politics and Polyvalence in Revolutionary France" in: Fashion Theory. The Journal of Dress, Body and Culture, 19:5.
  25. ^ Rifelj, Carol de Dobay (2010). Coiffures: Hair in Nineteenth-century French Literature and Culture. University of Delaware Press. p. 35. ISBN 9780874130997.
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  30. ^ "Stays | V&A Search the Collections". V and A Collections. 2021-01-12. Retrieved 2021-01-12.
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  34. ^ "Mirror of Graces; or the English Lady's Costume". pp. 100–101. Retrieved 4 July 2009.
  35. ^ Davidson, Hilary Dress in the Age of Jane Austen: Regency Fashion, Yale University Press, 2019, pp. 66-67
  36. ^ Davidson, Hilary Dress in the Age of Jane Austen: Regency Fashion, Yale University Press, 2019, p. 67
  37. ^ Nesfield Cookson, Mary (1935). The Costume Book. New York: R. M. McBride.
  38. ^ a b Payne, Blanche (1965) p. 447–449
  39. ^ Andrews, Meg. "Beyond the Fringe: Shawls of Paisley Design". Victoriana Magazine.
  40. ^ . Archived from the original on 2006-08-13. Retrieved 2006-10-08.
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  42. ^ Musee du Louvre (in French)
  43. ^ "Mirror of Graces; or the English Lady's Costume". p. 130. Retrieved 4 July 2009.
  44. ^ Bigelow, Marybelle S. (1979). Fashion in History: Western Dress, Prehistoric to Present. Minneapolis: Burgess Publishing Company. pp. 226.
  45. ^ Cheltenham Art Gallery & Museum
  46. ^ a b Cage, E. Claire (2009). "The Sartorial Self: Neoclassical Fashion and Gender Identity in France, 1797–1804". Eighteenth-Century Studies. 42 (2): 193–215. doi:10.1353/ecs.0.0039. S2CID 144480882.
  47. ^ a b Hornsby, Clare (2000). "7". The Impact of Italy: The Grand Tour and Beyond. The British School at Rome. pp. 123–146.
  48. ^ Freund, Amy. "The Citoyenne Tallien: Women, Politics, and Portraiture during the French Revolution," Art Bulletin, vol. 93 no. 3 (2011), 325–344.
  49. ^ Yalom, Marilyn. A History of the Breast. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1997. Print.
  50. ^ Gelpi, Barbara C. "Significant Exposure: The Turn-of-the-century Breast." Nineteenth-Century Contexts 20.2 (1997): 125–45. Print.
  51. ^ Morris Eaves; Robert N. Essick; Joseph Viscomi (eds.). "Naomi Entreating Ruth and Orpah to Return to the Land of Moab, object 1 (Butlin 299) "Naomi Entreating Ruth and Orpah to Return to the Land of Moab"". William Blake Archive. Retrieved September 26, 2013.
  52. ^ Cage, E. Claire (2009). "The Srtorial Self: Neoclassical Fashion and Gender Identity in France, 1797–1804". Eighteenth-Century Studies. 2. 42 (2): 193–215. doi:10.1353/ecs.0.0039. JSTOR 40264250. S2CID 144480882.
  53. ^ Cadeau, C (December 6, 2017). "Men's Fashion During the Regency Era (1810s to 1830s)". All About Canadian History.
  54. ^ Hollander, Anne (1995). Sex and Suits: The Evolution of Modern Dress. Kodansha. p. 85.
  55. ^ Perl, Lila (1990). From Top Hats to Baseball Caps, From Bustles to Blue Jeans. New York: Clarion Books. p. 33. ISBN 0899198724.
  56. ^ Payne, Blanche (1965) p. 456
  57. ^ Hollander, Anne (Winter 1992). "The Modernization of Fashion". Design Quarterly. Walker Art Center (154): 27–33. doi:10.2307/4091263. JSTOR 4091263.
  58. ^ a b Murray 1998
  59. ^ Philip Dwyer (2007). Napoleon, The Path to Power 1769 - 1799. Yale University Press. p. 472. ISBN 978-0-300-13754-5.
  60. ^ Hewson, Martha S.; Cronkite, Walter (January 1, 2009). John Quincy Adams – Google Knihy. ISBN 978-0-7910-7599-9. Retrieved November 4, 2018.
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  62. ^ Payne, Blanche (1965) p. 458
  63. ^ Adkins, Roy; Adkins, Lesley (2013). Jane Austen's England. Penguin Books Ltd.

Further reading

  • A Lady of Distinction: The Mirror of Graces, R.L. Shep, 1997. ISBN 0-914046-24-1
  • Ashelford, Jane: The Art of Dress: Clothing and Society 1500–1914, Abrams, 1996. ISBN 0-8109-6317-5
  • Austen, Jane: My Dear Cassandra: The Illustrated Letters, Selected and Introduced by Penelope Hughes-Hallett, Collins & Brown, 1990. ISBN 1-85585-004-4
  • Baumgarten, Linda: What Clothes Reveal: The Language of Clothing in Colonial and Federal America, Yale University Press, 2002. ISBN 0-300-09580-5
  • Black, J. Anderson and Madge Garland: A History of Fashion, Morrow, 1975. ISBN 0-688-02893-4
  • Bourhis, Katell le: The Age of Napoleon: Costume from Revolution to Empire, 1789–1815, Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1989. ISBN 0870995707
  • Campbell, Cynthia: The Most Polished Gentleman: George IV and the Women in His Life, A Kudos Book, 1995. ISBN 1-86052-003-0
  • de Marly, Diana: Working Dress: A History of Occupational Clothing, Batsford (UK), 1986; Holmes & Meier (US), 1987. ISBN 0-8419-1111-8
  • Freund, Amy. "The Citoyenne Tallien: Women, Politics, and Portraiture during the French Revolution," Art Bulletin, vol. 93 no. 3 (2011), 325–344.
  • Hughes, Kristine: Everyday Life in Regency and Victorian England: From 1811–1901, Writer's Digest Books, 1998. ISBN 0-89879-812-4
  • Lubrich, Naomi: The Little White Dress: Politics and Polyvalence in Revolutionary France in: Fashion Theory. The Journal of Dress, Body and Culture, 19:5, 2015
  • Murray, Venetia: High Society: A social History of the Regency Period, 1788–1830, Viking, 1998. ISBN 0-670-85758-0
  • Payne, Blanche: History of Costume from the Ancient Egyptians to the Twentieth Century, Harper & Row, 1965. No ISBN for this edition; ASIN B0006BMNFS
  • Rothstein, Natalie (editor): A Lady of Fashion: Barbara Johnson's Album of Styles and Fabrics, Norton, 1987, ISBN 0-500-01419-1
  • Simond, Louis: An American in Regency England, Pergamon Press, 1968. ISBN 0-08-007074-4
  • Tozer, Jane and Sarah Levitt, Fabric of Society: A Century of People and their Clothes 1770–1870, Laura Ashley Press, ISBN 0-9508913-0-4

1795, 1820, western, fashion, 1800s, western, fashion, redirects, here, fashion, century, whole, 19th, century, fashion, fashion, period, 1795, 1820, european, european, influenced, countries, final, triumph, undress, informal, styles, over, brocades, lace, pe. 1800s in Western fashion redirects here For fashion in the century as a whole see 19th century in fashion Fashion in the period 1795 1820 in European and European influenced countries saw the final triumph of undress or informal styles over the brocades lace periwigs and powder of the earlier 18th century In the aftermath of the French Revolution no one wanted to appear to be a member of the French aristocracy and people began using clothing more as a form of individual expression of the true self than as a pure indication of social status 1 As a result the shifts that occurred in fashion at the turn of the 19th century granted the opportunity to present new public identities that also provided insights into their private selves Katherine Aaslestad indicates how fashion embodying new social values emerged as a key site of confrontation between tradition and change 2 In the early 1800s women wore thin gauzy outer dresses while men adopted trousers and overcoats Rutger Jan Schimmelpenninck and his family 1801 02 by Pierre Paul Prud hon Madame Raymond de Verninac by Jacques Louis David with clothes and chair in Directoire style Year 7 that is 1798 99 Painting of a family game of checkers jeu de dames by French artist Louis Leopold Boilly c 1803 A well to do family edges cautiously along a plank to avoid the muddy streets of Paris by Boilly 1803 For women s dress the day to day outfit of the skirt and jacket style were practical and tactful recalling the working class woman 3 Women s fashions followed classical ideals and stiffly boned stays were abandoned in favor of softer less boned corsets 4 This natural figure was emphasized by being able to see the body beneath the clothing Visible breasts were part of this classical look and some characterized the breasts in fashion as solely aesthetic and sexual 5 This era of British history is known as the Regency period marked by the regency between the reigns of George III and George IV But the broadest definition of the period characterized by trends in fashion architecture culture and politics begins with the French Revolution of 1789 and ends with Queen Victoria s 1837 accession The names of popular people who lived in this time are still famous Napoleon and Josephine Juliette Recamier Jane Austen Percy Bysshe Shelley Lord Byron Beau Brummell Lady Emma Hamilton Queen Louise of Prussia and her husband and many more Beau Brummell introduced trousers perfect tailoring and unadorned immaculate linen as the ideals of men s fashion In Germany republican city states relinquished their traditional modest and practical garments and started to embrace the French and English fashion trends of short sleeved chemise dresses and Spencer jackets 6 American fashion trends emulated French dress but in a toned down manner with shawls and tunics to cope with the sheerness of the chemise 7 Spanish majos however rebelled against foppish French Enlightenment ideals by reclaiming and elaborating upon traditional Spanish dress 8 By the end of the eighteenth century a major shift in fashion was taking place that extended beyond changes in mere style to changes in philosophical and social ideals Prior to this time the style and traditions of the Ancien Regime prevented the conceptualization of the self Instead one s identity was considered malleable subject to change depending on what clothes one was wearing However by the 1780s the new natural style allowed one s inner self to transcend their clothes 9 During the 1790s there was a new concept of the internal and external self Before this time there had only been one self which was expressed through clothing When going to a masquerade ball people wore specific clothing so they could not show their individuality through their clothing 9 Incorporated in this new natural style was the importance of ease and comfort of one s dress Not only was there a new emphasis on hygiene but also clothing became much lighter and more able to be changed and washed frequently Even upper class women began wearing cropped dresses as opposed to dresses with long trains or hoops that restricted them from leaving their homes The subsequent near stasis of the silhouette inspired volumes of new trims and details on heavily trimmed skirts back into fashion In the Regency years complicated historic and orientalist elements provided lavish stylistic displays as such details were a vigorous vehicle for conspicuous consumption given their labor intensive fabrications and therefore a potent signifier of hierarchy for the upper classes who wore the styles This kind of statement was particularly noticeable in profuse trimmings especially on skirts where unrestrained details were common along with cut edge details and edge trims Women s fashion was also influenced by male fashion such as tailored waistcoats and jackets to emphasize women s mobility This new movement toward practicality of dress showed that dress became less of a way to solely categorize between classes or genders dress was meant to suit one s personal daily routine 10 It was also during this time period that the fashion magazine and journal industry began to take off They were most often monthly often competing periodicals that allowed men and women to keep up with the ever changing styles 11 Contents 1 Influence of the Industrial Revolution 2 Changes in fashion 3 Women s fashion 3 1 Overview 3 2 Gowns 3 3 Silhouette 3 4 Hairstyles and headgear 3 5 Undergarments 3 6 Outerwear and shoes 3 7 Accessories 3 8 Directoire 1795 1799 3 8 1 Directoire gallery 3 8 1 1 Caricatures 3 9 Empire 1800 1815 3 9 1 Empire gallery 3 9 1 1 Caricatures 3 10 Regency 1815 1820 gallery 3 10 1 Caricature 3 11 Russian fashion 3 12 Spanish fashion 4 Men s fashion 4 1 Overview 4 2 The rise of the dandy 4 3 Hairstyles and headgear 4 4 Style gallery 1795 1809 4 5 Style gallery 1810 1820 5 Children s fashion 6 Revival of Directoire Empire Regency fashions 7 See also 8 Footnotes 9 Further readingInfluence of the Industrial Revolution Edit Fashion Plate The Russian amp Prussian Bonnet amp Pelisse published in La Belle Assemblee July 1 1814 In the late 18th century clothes were mostly sold by individual shopkeepers who were often the artisans who made the goods Customers usually lived in the same neighborhood as the shops and the shops would gain popularity by their customers word of mouth recommendation with the exception of warehouses i e any retail on wholesale where goods being sold were not necessarily made in the shop 12 However things started to change during the transition to the 19th century People sought efficiency and variety under the influence of the Industrial Revolution improved transportation and introduction of machines in manufacturing allowed fashion to develop at an even faster pace The first sewing machine emerged in 1790 and later Josef Madersperger began developing his first sewing machine in 1807 presenting his first working machine in 1814 The introduction of the sewing machine sped up garment production 12 However it had no widespread social impact until the 1840s and clothing was entirely made by hand in the period to 1820 Meanwhile advanced spinning weaving and cotton printing techniques developed in the 18th century had already brought cheaper widely available washable fabrics These durable and affordable fabrics became popular among the larger population These techniques were further developed by the introduction of machines Before accessories like embroidery and lace were manufactured on a small and limited scale by skilled craftsmen and sold in their own shops in 1804 a machine for embroidering was constructed by John Duncan and people started producing these essential accessories in factories and dispatching the products to shops throughout the country These technical developments in clothing production allowed a greater variety of styles rapid changes in fashion also became possible 12 The Industrial Revolution bridged Europe and America with regards to travel When Louis Simond first arrived in America he was struck by the mobility of the population and frequency of people made trips to the capital writing you meet nowhere with those persons who never were out of their native place and whose habits are wholly local nobody above poverty who has not visited London once in his life and most of those who can visit once a year 12 New canals and railways not only transported people but created national and even broader markets by transporting goods manufactured in factories at great distances The rise of industry throughout the Western world increased garment production and people were encouraged to travel more widely and purchase more goods than ever before 13 Communication was also improved in this era New ideas about fashion were conveyed by little dolls dressed in the latest style newspapers and illustrated magazines 14 for example La Belle Assemblee founded by John Bell was a British women s magazine published from 1806 to 1837 It was known for its fashion plates of contemporary fashions demonstrating ways for women to dress and create ensembles 15 Changes in fashion Edit1790s Women age of undress 7 dressing like statues coming to life 16 Greek fashion started to inspire the current fashion and fillet Greek classical hairstyles and high waisted clothing with a more triangular hem started to find its way pastel fabrics natural makeup bare arms blonde wigs accessorized with hats turbans gloves jewelry small handbags reticules shawls handkerchiefs 6 parasols fans Maja layered skirt Men trousers w perfect tailoring linen coats cutaway in the front w long tails cloaks hats the Dandy Majo short jacket1800s Women short hair white hats 7 trim feathers lace Egyptian and Eastern influences in jewelry and apparel shawls hooded overcoats hair masses of curls sometimes pulled back into a bun Men linen shirts w high collars tall hats hair short and wigless a la Titus or Bedford Crop but often with some long locks left coming down1810s Women soft subtle sheer classical drapes raised back waist of high waisted dresses short fitted single breasted jackets 6 morning dress walking dress evening dress riding habits bare bosoms and arms hair parted in the center tight ringlets over the ears 17 Men fitted single breasted tailcoats cravats wrapped up to the chin sideburns and Brutus style 6 natural hair tight breeches silk stockings accessorized with gold watches cane hats outside 1820s Women dress waistlines began to drop elaborate hem and neckline decoration cone shaped skirts sleeves pinched Men overcoats greatcoats w fur or velvet collars the Garrick coat 18 Wellington boots jockey bootsWomen s fashion Edit 1811 dance dress In Spain some society ladies rebelled against French fashion by dressing as majas like Dona Isabel de Porcel 1805 Overview Edit In this period fashionable women s clothing styles were based on a high under the bust waistline only called the Empire silhouette in the 20th century dresses were closely fitted to the torso just under the bust falling loosely below In different contexts such styles are now commonly called Directoire style referring to the Directory government of France during the second half of the 1790s Empire style referring to Napoleon s 1804 1814 1815 empire and often also to his 1800 1804 consulate or Regency loosely used to refer to various periods between the 18th century and the Victorian 19 Empire silhouette and Directoire style were not used at the time these styles were worn 20 These 1795 1820 fashions were quite different from the styles prevalent during most of the 18th century and the rest of the 19th century when women s clothes were generally tight against the torso from the natural waist upwards and heavily full skirted below often inflated by means of hoop skirts crinolines panniers bustles etc Women s fashion around this time started to follow classical ideals inspired by the ancient Greek and Roman style with its gracious loosely falling dresses that were gathered or just accentuated over the natural waist under the bust For women heavily boned stays gave way to a celebration of the natural form 20 Bodices were short with waistlines falling just below the bust Fashion fabrics such as cotton muslin were light to the point of being sheer however printed heavier cottons wools and other textiles were also popular 21 Gowns Edit Inspired by neoclassical tastes undress was the style of the day casual and informal It was the type of gown a woman wore from morning until noon or later depending on her social engagements of the day The short waisted dresses sported soft loose skirts and were often made of white almost transparent muslin which was easily washed and draped loosely like the garments on Greek and Roman statues Since the fabric clung to the body revealing what was underneath it made nudity a la grecque a centerpiece of public spectacle Satin was sometimes worn for evening wear 22 Half Dress is thought of as how one would dress when going out during the day or meeting with guests Full Dress was what a lady wore to formal events day or night Evening Dress was only appropriate at evening affairs Thus during the 1795 1820 period it was often possible for middle and upper class women to wear clothes that were not very confining or cumbersome and still be considered decently and fashionably dressed Among middle and upper class women there was a basic distinction between morning dress worn at home in the afternoons as well as mornings and evening attire generally both men and women changed clothes in preparation for the evening meal and possible entertainments to follow There were also further gradations such as afternoon dress walking dress riding habits traveling dress dinner dress etc In the Mirror of Graces or the English Lady s Costume published in London in 1811 the author a Lady of Distinction advised In the morning the arms and bosom must be completely covered to the throat and wrists From the dinner hour to the termination of the day the arms to a graceful height above the elbow may be bare and the neck and shoulders unveiled as far as delicacy will allow 23 Mourning dresses were worn to show the mourning of a loved one They were high necked and long sleeved covering throat and wrists generally plain and black and devoid of decoration Gowns now restricted to formal occasions were often extravagantly trimmed and decorated with lace ribbons and netting They were cut low and sported short sleeves baring bosoms Bared arms were covered by long white gloves Our Lady of Distinction however cautions young women from displaying their bosoms beyond the boundaries of decency saying The bosom and shoulders of a very young and fair girl may be displayed without exciting much displeasure or disgust A Lady of Distinction also advised young ladies to wear softer shades of color such as pinks periwinkle blue or lilacs The mature matron could wear fuller colors such as purple black crimson deep blue or yellow Many women of this era remarked upon how being fully dressed meant the bosom and shoulders were bare and yet being under dressed would mean one s neckline went right up to one s chin citation needed Silhouette Edit Due to the importance of showing social status the fashion industry was very much influenced by society during the Regency era One s position was determined by the person s wealth etiquette family status intelligence and beauty Women financially and socially relied on their husbands The only socially acceptable activities in which women could participate centered around social gatherings and fashion the most important component of which was attending evening parties These parties helped to build relationships and connection with others As etiquette dictated different standards of attire for different events afternoon dress evening dress evening full dress ball dress and different types of dresses were popular Hortense de Beauharnais Women s fashion in the Regency era started to change drastically It popularized the empire silhouette which featured a fitted bodice and high waist This new natural style emphasized the beauty of the body s natural lines Clothing became lighter and easier to care for than in the past Women often wore several layers of clothing typically undergarments gowns and outerwear The chemise the standard undergarment of the era prevented the thin gauzy dresses from being fully transparent Outerwear such as the spencer and the pelisse were popular The empire silhouette was created in the late 18th century to about the early 19th century and referred to the period of the First French Empire This adoption had been linked with France s neoclassical taste for Greek principles In fact however its genealogy is much more complex It was first worn by the French queen whose reference was Caribbean not Greek 24 The style was often worn in white to denote as high social status Josephine Bonaparte was one of the figureheads for the Empire waistline with her elaborated and decorated Empire line dresses Regency women followed the Empire style along with the same trend of raised waistlines as French styles even when their countries were at war Starting from the 1780s and early 1790s women s silhouette became slimmer and the waistlines crept up After 1795 waistlines rose dramatically and the skirt circumference was further reduced A few years later England and France started to show the focus of the high waist style and this led to the creation of Empire style French lady in 1808 the style was often accompanied by a shawl or similar wrap or a short Spencer jacket as the dresses were light and left much uncovered The style began as part of Neoclassical fashion reviving styles from Greco Roman art which showed women wearing loose fitting rectangular tunics known as peplos which were belted under the bust providing support for women and a cool comfortable outfit especially in a warm climate The empire silhouette was defined by the waistline which was positioned directly under the bust The Empire silhouette was the key style in women s clothing during the Regency era The dresses were usually light long and fit loosely they were usually in white and often sheer from the ankle to just below the bodice which strongly emphasized thin hem and tied around the body A long rectangular shawl or wrap very often plain red but with a decorated border in portraits helped in colder weather and was apparently lain around the midriff when seated for which sprawling semi recumbent postures were favored The dresses had a fitted bodice and it gave a high waist appearance The style had waxed and waned in fashion for hundreds of years The shape of the dresses also helped to lengthen the body s appearance The clothing can also be draped to maximize the bust Lightweight fabrics were typically used to create a flowing effect Also ribbon sash and other decorative features were used to highlight the waistline The empire gowns were often with a low neckline and short sleeves and women usually wore them as for formal occasions On the other hand day dresses had a higher neckline and long sleeves The chemisette was a staple for fashionable ladies Although there were now differences between dresses and gowns the high waistline was not changed Hairstyles and headgear Edit Miniature portrait of a Russian lady Russian school c 1800 Portrait of Caroline Murat and her daughter Letizia painted in 1807 by Elisabeth Vigee Lebrun Madame Murat wears the formal red train of court dress over her high waisted gown During this period the classical influence extended to hairstyles Often masses of curls were worn over the forehead and ears with the longer back hair drawn up into loose buns or Psyche knots influenced by Greek and Roman styles By the later 1810s front hair was parted in the center and worn in tight ringlets over the ears 17 Adventurous women like Lady Caroline Lamb wore short cropped hairstyles a la Titus the Journal de Paris reporting in 1802 that more than half of elegant women were wearing their hair or wig a la Titus a layered cut usually with some tresses hanging down 25 In the Mirror of Graces a Lady of Distinction writes Now easy tresses the shining braid the flowing ringlet confined by the antique comb or bodkin give graceful specimens of the simple taste of modern beauty Nothing can correspond more elegantly with the untrammeled drapery of our newly adopted classic raiment than this undecorated coiffure of nature 26 Conservative married women continued to wear linen mob caps which now had wider brims at the sides to cover the ears Fashionable women wore similar caps for morning at home undress wear 27 For the first time in centuries respectable but daringly fashionable women would leave the house without a hat or bonnet previously something often associated with prostitutes However most women continued to wear something on their head outdoors though they were beginning to cease to do so indoors during the day as well as for evening wear The antique head dress or Queen Mary coif Chinese hat Oriental inspired turban and Highland helmet were popular As for bonnets their crowns and brims were adorned with increasingly elaborate ornamentations such as feathers and ribbons 28 In fact ladies of the day embellished their hats frequently replacing old decorations with new trims or feathers Two English girls practice archery 1799 Artist Rolinda Sharples wears her hair in a mass of curls her mother wears a sheer indoor cap c 1820 Mme Seriziat wears a straw bonnet trimmed with green ribbon over a lace mob cap 1795 painting by Jacques Louis David Fashionable bonnet Paris 1818Undergarments Edit 1811 illustration of underclothes showing one form of Regency stays Fashionable women of the Regency era wore several layers of undergarments The first was the chemise or shift a thin garment with tight short sleeves and a low neckline if worn under evening wear made of white cotton and finished with a plain hem that was shorter than the dress These shifts were meant to protect the outer clothes from perspiration and were washed more frequently than outer clothes In fact washerwomen of the time used coarse soap when scrubbing these garments then plunged them in boiling water hence the absence of color lace or other embellishments which would have faded or damaged the fabric under such rough treatment Chemises and shifts also prevented the transparent muslin or silk dresses from being too revealing The next layer was a pair of stays or corset more lightly boned While high waisted classical fashions required no corset for the slight of figure most ordinary women still wore some kind of bust support although the aim was to look as if they were not 29 The disappearance of the corset or stays has been much exaggerated by writers on the Regency period There were some experiments to produce garments which would serve the same functions as a modern brassiere 30 31 32 33 In the Mirror of Graces a divorce was described as an undergarment that served to separate a woman s breasts Made of steel or iron that was covered by a type of padding and shaped like a triangle this device was placed in the center of the chest 34 Short stays corsets extending only a short distance below the breasts were often worn over the shift or chemise not directly next to the skin and long stays corsets extending down towards the natural waist were worn by women trying to appear slimmer than they were or who needed more support The English wore these more than the French but even such long stays were not primarily intended to constrict the waist in the manner of Victorian corsets The final layer was the petticoat which was the name for any skirt worn under the gown and could be a skirt with a bodice a skirt attached over the torso by tapes or a separate skirt 35 These petticoats were often worn between the underwear and the outer dress and were considered part of the outer clothing not underwear The lower edge of the petticoat was intended to be seen since women would often lift their outer dresses to spare the relatively delicate material of the outer dress from mud or damp so exposing only the coarser and cheaper fabric of the petticoat to risk Often exposed to view petticoats were decorated at the hem with rows of tucks or lace or ruffles Drawers large flowy shorts with buttons at the crotch were only occasionally worn at this time 36 Women had no underwear under their dresses Stockings hosiery made of silk or knitted cotton were held up by garters below the knee until suspenders were introduced in the late 19th century and were often of a white or pale flesh color 37 Outerwear and shoes Edit Madame Riviere 1806 Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres Louvre Leather slippers between 1795 and 1805 During this time period women s clothing was much thinner than in the eighteenth century some warmer outerwear became important in fashion especially in colder climates Coat like garments such as pelisses and redingotes were popular as were shawls mantles mantelets capes and cloaks The mantelet was a short cape that was eventually lengthened and made into a shawl The redingote another popular example was a full length garment resembling a man s riding coat hence the name in style that could be made of different fabrics and patterns 7 Throughout the period the Indian shawl was the favored wrap 38 as houses and the typical English country house were generally draughty and the sheer muslin and light silk dresses popular during this time provided less protection Shawls were made of soft cashmere or silk or even muslin for summer Paisley patterns were extremely popular at the time 39 Short high waisted jackets called spencers 38 were worn outdoors along with long hooded cloaks Turkish wraps mantles capes Roman tunics chemisettes and overcoats called pelisses 40 which were often sleeveless and reached down as far as the ankles These outer garments were often made of double sarsnet fine Merino cloth or velvets and trimmed with furs such as swan s down fox chinchilla or sable On May 6 1801 Jane Austen wrote her sister Cassandra Black gauze cloaks are worn as much as anything 41 Thin flat fabric silk or velvet or leather slippers were generally worn as opposed to the high heeled shoes of much of the 18th century Metal pattens were strapped on shoes to protect them from rain or mud raising the feet an inch or so off the ground Accessories Edit ca 1813 Gloves were always worn by women outside the house When worn inside as when making a social call or on formal occasions such as a ball they were removed when dining 42 About the length of the glove A Lady of Distinction writes If the prevailing fashion be to reject the long sleeve and to partially display the arm let the glove advance considerably above the elbow and there be fastened with a draw string or armlet But this should only be the case when the arm is muscular coarse or scraggy When it is fair smooth and round it will admit of the glove being pushed down to a little above the wrists 43 Longer gloves were worn rather loosely during this period crumpling below the elbow As described in the passage above garters could fasten longer gloves Reticules held personal items such as vinaigrettes The form fitting dresses or frocks of the day had no pockets thus these small drawstring handbags were essential These handbags were often called buskins or balantines They were rectangular in shape and was worn suspended by a woven band from a belt placed around the figure above the waist 44 Parasols as shown in the illustration protected a lady s skin from the sun and were considered an important fashion accessory Slender and light in weight they came in a variety of shapes colors and sizes Fashionable ladies and gentlemen used fans to cool themselves and to enhance gestures and body language Made of paper or silk on sticks of ivory and wood and printed with oriental motifs or popular scenes of the era these ubiquitous accessories featured a variety of shapes and styles such as pleated or rigid An information sheet from the Cheltenham Museum describes fans and their use in body language and communication click and scroll to page 4 45 Directoire 1795 1799 Edit Portrait of Emma Lady Hamilton by Elisabeth Vigee Lebrun ca 1790s An idealized classicized depiction of an English Regency domestic scene By the mid 1790s neoclassical clothing had come into fashion in France 46 Several influences had combined to bring about this simplification in women s clothing aspects of Englishwomen s practical country outdoor wear leaked up into French high fashion and there was a reaction in revolutionary France against the stiffly boned corsets and brightly colored satins and other heavy fabrics that were in style in the Ancien Regime see 1750 1795 in fashion But ultimately Neo classicism was adopted for its association with classical republican ideas with reference to Greece rather than republican Rome which was now considered politically dangerous 46 This renewed fascination of the classical past was encouraged by the recent discoveries of Pompeii and Herculaneum and would likely have not been possible outside such a specific geographic and historical setting that allowed the idea of the past made present to become paramount 47 Along with the influences of the Pompeii and Herculaneum excavations several other factors came together to popularize neoclassical dress Starting in the early 1790s Emma Hamilton began her performances of attitudes something that was considered by contemporaries as entirely new These attitudes were based loosely on the ancient practice of pantomime though Emma s performances lacked masks and musical accompaniment 47 Her performances created a fusion between art and nature art came alive and her body became a type of art 16 As an aid to her performances of tragic mythological and historical figures Emma wore the clothing a la grecque that would become popular in mainstream France in the coming years A simple light colored chemise made from thin flowing material was worn and gathered with a narrow ribbon under the breasts Simple cashmere shawls were used as headdresses or to give more fullness to the drapery of the chemise They also helped to prevent broken lines in the performance so that the outstretched arms were always connected with the body escalating the effect of fluid movement and oftentimes a cape or a cloak was worn to emphasize the lines of the body in certain poses This highlighted the continuity of surface of line and form in the body of the performer to emphasize the unity simplicity and continuously flowing movement from one part of the body to the next The hair was worn in a natural loose and flowing fashion All of these properties blended together to allow an extensive play of light and shadow to reveal and accent certain parts of the body during the performance while covering others 16 Emma was highly capable in her attitudes and the influence of her dress spread from Naples to Paris as wealthy Parisians took the Grand Tour A satirical 1796 contrast between old Elizabethan and Directoire clothing styles Too Much and Too Little reads the caption of this caricature by Isaac Cruikshank There is also some evidence that the white muslin shift dress became popular after Thermidor through the influence of prison dress Revolutionary women such as Madame Tallien portrayed themselves in this way because it was the only clothing they possessed during their time in prison The chemise a la grecque also represented the struggle for representation of the self and the stripping down of past cultural values 48 Also a simplification of the attire worn by preteen girls in the 1780s who were no longer required to wear miniature versions of adult stays and panniers probably paved the way for the simplification of the attire worn by teenage girls and adult women in the 1790s Waistlines became somewhat high by 1795 but skirts were still rather full and neoclassical influences were not yet dominant It was during the second half of the 1790s that fashionable women in France began to adopt a thoroughgoing Classical style based on an idealized version of ancient Greek and Roman dress or what was thought at the time to be ancient Greek and Roman dress with narrow clinging skirts Some of the extreme Parisian versions of the neoclassical style such as narrow straps which bared the shoulders and diaphanous dresses without sufficient stays petticoats or shifts worn beneath were not widely adopted elsewhere but many features of the late 1790s neoclassical style were broadly influential surviving in successively modified forms in European fashions over the next two decades With this Classical style came the willingness to expose the breast With the new iconography of the Revolution as well as a change in emphasis on maternal breast feeding the chemise dress became a sign of the new egalitarian society 49 The style was simple and appropriate for the comfort of a pregnant or nursing woman as the breasts were emphasized and their availability was heightened Maternity became fashionable and it was not uncommon for women to walk around with their breasts exposed Some women took the fashionable maternity a step further and wore a six month pad under their dress to appear pregnant 50 White was considered the most suitable color for neoclassical clothing accessories were often in contrasting colors Short trains trailing behind were common in dresses of the late 1790s Directoire gallery Edit 1 1795 2 1795 3 1796 4 c 1798 5 1798 6 1799 7 1798 8 1798 9 1799 10 1799This portrait of the Frankland sisters by John Hoppner gives an idea of the styles of 1795 Ruth entreating Naomi and Orpah to return to the land of Moab by William Blake Blake is not a typical neo classicist but this shows a somewhat similar idealization of antiquity as well as predicting the future high fashions of the late 1790s The particular image was composed in 1795 and is currently held by the Fitzwilliam Museum 51 Leipzig fashion plate showing woman and girl wearing elegantly simple high waisted styles which are not strongly neoclassical however Portrait of Gabrielle Josephine du Pont 1798 picture showing a lady who seems none too warmly attired for a balloon journey in her low cut thin looking Directoire dress Fashion plate of white Directoire dress worn with contrasting red shawl with a Greek key border A 1798 sketch of a day outfit with short spencer jacket less neoclassical though still following the empire silhouette Marie Denise Villers wears an almost transparent white dress Gertrud Hage wears a white transparent dress over a white petticoat Riding habits of 1799 The habit on the right features a short jacket with tails The green habit on the left may be a redingote rather than a jacket and petticoat Caricatures Edit 1 1796 2 1796 3 1796 4 1799 5 1798 6 1799 jpg TOO MUCH and TOO LITTLE or Summer Clothing of 1556 amp 1796 a February 8 1796 caricature engraved by Isaac Cruikshank father of George after a drawing by George M Woodward In 1796 strongly neoclassically influenced styles were still very new in England Notice the single vertical feather springing from the hair of the 1796 woman Tippies of 1796 a highly stylized parody which caricatures women s feather headdresses and dandies tight trousers among other things The gallery of fashion satirizes early neo classical influenced fashions Parisian ladies in their full winter dress an over the top caricature by Isaac Cruikshank of allegedly excessively diaphanous styles worn in late 1790s Paris A French Invasion on the Fashionable Dress of 1798 British caricature also showing tight trousers wigs and square neckline Monstrosities of 1799 Empire 1800 1815 Edit English and French fashions 1815 The morning dress has back gathers and long sleeves and like the walking costume has trim at the hemline and new detail at the upper sleeve During the first two decades of the 19th century fashions continued to follow the basic high waisted empire silhouette but in other respects neoclassical influences became progressively diluted Dresses remained narrow in the front but fullness at the raised back waist allowed room to walk Colors other than white came into style the fad for diaphanous outer fabrics faded except in certain formal contexts and some elements of obviously visible ornamentation came back into use in the design of the dress as opposed to the elegant simplicity or subtle white on white embroidery of the dress of ca 1800 Empire gallery Edit 1 1804 2 1804 3 1804 4 c 1805 5 c 1806 6 1809 7 1809 8 1810 9 1810 10 1810 11 1810 12 1813Dolley Madison wears a short sleeved light pink dress with a high waistline She also wears a thin chain necklace a golden colored shawl and her hair in a bun with loose waves the simplicity yet elegance of her attire is typical of the era 1804 French painting by Marguerite Gerard showing two different dresses one more elaborate than the other Note the low neckline then in fashion Paris Fashion of 1804 Note the even more generous neckline Conservative fashion Mob cap of c 1805 is pleated in the front and has a narrow frilled brim that widens to cover the ears America Morning dress Cotton Morning dress c 1806 Mrs Harrison Gray Otis wears a dress with a sheer top layer over a partial lining and a patterned shawl She wears a gold armlet on her left arm Her hair is styled in loose waves at the temples and over her ears Massachusetts 1809 1809 gown worn with elbow length gloves 1810 gown shown with elbow length gloves 1810 sketch of a woman in Schute bonnet and blue striped dress with flounces Portrait of a woman by Henri Mulard ca 1810 Fashion plate of a panniered English court gown 1810 Marguerite Charlotte David wears a simple white satin gown and the ubiquitous shawl Her headdress is trimmed with ostrich plumes Caricatures Edit 1 1807 2 1810 3 1813 The Fashions of the Day or Time Past and Present a caricature purporting to show the provocative and revealing character of 1807 fashions as compared to those of the 18th century deliberately exaggerating the contrast Three Graces in a High Wind 1810 caricature by Gillray A satire of clinging dresses worn with few layers of petticoats beneath Almack s Longitude and Latitude 1813 caricature by George Cruikshank Regency 1815 1820 gallery Edit This era signaled the loss of any lingering neoclassical pseudo Grecian styles in women s dress This decline was especially evident in France due to the Emperor Napoleon s suppression of trade in the fabrics used in neoclassical dress 52 While waistlines were still high they were beginning to drop slightly Larger and more abundant decoration especially near the hem and neckline foreshadowed greater extravagance in the coming years More petticoats were being worn and a stiffer more cone shaped skirt became popular Stiffness could be supplemented by layers of ruffles and tucks on a hem as well as corded or flounced petticoats Sleeves began to be pulled tied and pinched in ways that were more influenced by romantic and gothic styles than neoclassical Hats and hairstyles became more elaborate and trimmed climbing higher to balance widening skirts 1 1815 2 1815 3 1816 4 1816 5 1817 6 1817 7 1818 8 1818 9 1818 10 1819 11 18191815 walking costume 1816 day dresses Comtesse Vilain and her daughter wear their hair parted in the front center with tight ringlets over each ear back hair is brushed back into a bun 1816 Countess Thekla Ludolf wears a red dress over a white chemise 1816 1817 dancing illustration showing the beginning of the trend towards a conical silhouette 1817 walking costume is heavily trimmed and tasseled 1818 gown Mary Lodge wears the new fashion for rich color Her crimson gown with frills at neck and sleeves is worn with an ivory shawl with a wide paisley patterned border 1818 1818 gown 1819 gown with ornamentation near the hem Morning dress for staying inside the house during the mornings and early afternoons 1819 Caricature Edit 1 1818 2 French fashion 1818 Monstrosities of 1818 a satire by George Cruikshank of the female trend towards a conical silhouette and male high cravats and dandyism A peep at the French Monstrosities a French fashion satire by George Cruikshank Russian fashion Edit Russia 1796 Russia 1797 Russia 1797 Russia 1798 Russia 1799 Russia 1799 Russia 1806 Russia 1809 Russia 1810 Russia 1819Spanish fashion Edit Spain 1800 Spain 1802 Spain 1804 Spain 1805 Spain 1805 Spain 1805 Spain 1806 Spain 1810 Spain 1816Men s fashion Edit Pierre Seriziat in riding dress 1795 His snug leather breeches have a tie and buttons at the knee and a fall front The white waistcoat is double breasted a popular style at this time His tall hat is slightly conical Artist Jean Baptiste Isabey wears a cropped riding coat and dark breeches tucked into boots He carries his hat and gloves 1795 A Directoire dandy in 1797 by Girodet Portrait of Jean Baptiste Belley Deputy for Saint Domingue This gentleman wears a double breasted frockcoat in dark blue over a buff waistcoat His gray trousers have straps under his shoes His slightly conical tall hat sits in the windowsill Germany c 1815 by Georg Friedrich Kersting Overview Edit This period saw the final abandonment of lace embroidery and other embellishments from serious men s clothing outside of formalized court dress it would not reappear except as an affectation of Aesthetic dress in the 1880s and its successor the Young Edwardian look of the 1960s Instead cut and tailoring became much more important as an indicator of quality 18 This transformation can be attributed in part to an increased interest in antiquity stemming from the discovery of classical engravings including the Elgin Marbles The figures depicted in classical art were viewed as an exemplar of the ideal natural form and an embodiment of Neoclassical ideas The style in London for men became more and more refined and this was due to the influence of two things the dandy and the romantic movement The dandy a man who placed high importance on personal aesthetics and hobbies but wanted to seem totally nonchalant about it arguably emerged as early as the 1790s Dark colors were all but mandatory Dark doesn t necessarily mean dreary though many items particularly vests and coats were cut from rich vivid fabrics Blue tailcoats with gold buttons were everywhere White muslin shirts sometimes with ruffles on the neck sleeves were extremely popular Breeches were officially on their way out with pants trousers taking their place Fabrics in general were becoming more practical silk and more wool cotton and buckskin 53 Therefore in the 18th century the dress was simplified and greater emphasis was put on tailoring to enhance the natural form of the body 54 This was also the period of the rise of hair wax for styling men s hair as well as mutton chops as a style of facial hair Breeches became longer tightly fitted leather riding breeches reached almost to the boot tops and were replaced by pantaloons or trousers for fashionable streetwear The French Revolution is largely responsible for altering the standard male dress During the revolution clothing symbolized the division between the upper classes and the working class revolutionaries French rebels earned the nickname sans culottes or the people without breeches because of the loose floppy trousers they popularized 55 Coats were cutaway in front with long skirts or tails behind and had tall standing collars Lapels were not as large as they had been in years before and often featured an M shaped notch unique to the period 18 Shirts were made of linen had attached collars and were worn with stocks or wrapped in a cravat tied in various fashions Pleated frills at the cuffs and the front opening went out of fashion by the end of the period 18 Waistcoats were high waisted and squared off at the bottom but came in a broad variety of styles They were often double breasted with wide lapels and stand collars Around 1805 large lapels that overlapped those of the jacket began to fall out of fashion as did the 18th century tradition of wearing the coat unbuttoned and gradually waistcoats became less visible Shortly before this time waistcoats were commonly vertically striped but by 1810 plain white waistcoats were increasingly fashionable as did horizontally striped waistcoats High collared waistcoats were fashionable until 1815 then collars were gradually lowered as the shawl collar came into use toward the end of this period 18 Overcoats or greatcoats were fashionable often with contrasting collars of fur or velvet The garrick sometimes called a coachman s coat was a particularly popular style and had between three and five short caplets attached to the collar 18 Boots typically Hessian boots with heart shaped tops and tassels were a mainstay in men s footwear After the Duke of Wellington defeated Napoleon at Waterloo in 1815 Wellington boots as they were known became the rage tops were knee high in front and cut lower in back The jockey boot with a turned down cuff of lighter colored leather had previously been popular but continued to be worn for riding 56 Court shoes with elevated heels became popular with the introduction of trousers The rise of the dandy Edit The clothes obsessed dandy first appeared in the 1790s both in London and Paris In the slang of the time a dandy was differentiated from a fop in that the dandy s dress was more refined and sober The dandy prided himself in natural excellence and tailoring allowed for exaggeration of the natural figure beneath fashionable outerwear 57 In High Society A Social History of the Regency Period 1788 1830 Venetia Murray writes Other admirers of dandyism have taken the view that it is a sociological phenomenon the result of a society in a state of transition or revolt Barbey d Aurevilly one of the leading French dandies at the end of the nineteenth century explained Some have imagined that dandyism is primarily a specialisation in the art of dressing oneself with daring and elegance It is that but much else as well It is a state of mind made up of many shades a state of mind produced in old and civilised societies where gaiety has become infrequent or where conventions rule at the price of their subject s boredom it is the direct result of the endless warfare between respectability and boredom In Regency London dandyism was a revolt against a different kind of tradition an expression of distaste for the extravagance and ostentation of the previous generation and of sympathy with the new mood of democracy 58 Beau Brummell set the fashion for dandyism in British society from the mid 1790s which was characterized by immaculate personal cleanliness immaculate linen shirts with high collars perfectly tied cravats and exquisitely tailored plain dark coats 18 contrasting in many respects with the maccaroni of the earlier 18th century Brummell abandoned his wig and cut his hair short in a Roman fashion dubbed a la Brutus echoing the fashion for all things classical seen in women s wear of this period He also led the move from breeches to snugly tailored pantaloons or trousers often light colored for day and dark for the evening based on working class clothing adopted by all classes in France in the wake of the Revolution In fact Brummel s reputation for taste and refinement was such that fifty years after his death Max Beerbohm wrote In certain congruities of dark cloth in the rigid perfection of his linen in the symmetry of his glove with his hand lay the secret of Mr Brummell s miracles Not every male aspiring to attain Brummel s sense of elegance and style succeeded however and these dandies were subject to caricature and ridicule Venetia Murray quotes an excerpt from Diary of an Exquisite from The Hermit in London 1819 Took four hours to dress and then it rained ordered the tilbury and my umbrella and drove to the fives court next to my tailors put him off after two years tick no bad fellow that Weston broke three stay laces and a buckle tore the quarter of a pair of shoes made so thin by O Shaughnessy in St James s Street that they were light as brown paper what a pity they were lined with pink satin and were quite the go put on a pair of Hoby s over did it in perfuming my handkerchief and had to recommence de novo could not please myself in tying my cravat lost three quarters of an hour by that tore two pairs of kid gloves in putting them hastily on was obliged to go gently to work with the third lost another quarter of an hour by this drove off furiously in my chariot but had to return for my splendid snuff box as I knew that I should eclipse the circle by it 58 Transformation of men s fashion during a lifetime Marquis de Lafayette 1757 1834 wearing a powdered wig tied in a queue that was a common piece of men s dress by c 1795 Marquis de Lafayette depicted in later years of his life dressed according to the fashion of the 1820s Hairstyles and headgear Edit The three Consuls of French Republic in 1799 1804 L R Jean Jacques Regis de Cambaceres 1753 1824 Napoleon Bonaparte 1769 1821 and Charles Francois Lebrun 1739 1824 While the older ones Cambaceres and Lebrun wear old fashioned powdered wigs younger Napoleon wears a fashionable short unpowdered hairstyle The French Revolution 1789 1799 in France and the Pitt s hair powder tax in 1795 in Britain effectively ended the fashion for both wigs and powder in these countries and younger men of fashion in both countries began to wear their own unpowdered hair without a queue in short curls often with long sideburns The new styles like the Brutus a la Titus and the Bedford Crop became fashionable and subsequently spread also in other European and European influenced countries including the United States Many notable men during this period especially younger ones followed this new fashion trend of short unpowdered hairstyles e g Napoleon Bonaparte 1769 1821 initially wearing long hair tied in a queue changed his hairstyle and cut his hair short while in Egypt in 1798 59 Likewise the future U S President John Quincy Adams 1767 1848 who had worn a powdered wig and long hair tied in a queue in his youth abandoned this fashion during this period while serving as the U S Minister to Russia 1809 1814 60 and later became the first president to adopt a short haircut instead of long hair tied in a queue 61 Older men military officers and those in conservative professions such as lawyers judges physicians and servants retained their wigs and powder Formal court dress of European monarchies also still required a powdered wig or long powdered hair tied in a queue until the accession of Napoleon to the throne as emperor 1804 1814 Tricorne and bicorne hats were still worn but the most fashionable hat was tall and slightly conical this would soon however be displaced by the top hat and reign as the only hat for formal occasions for the next century 62 Style gallery 1795 1809 Edit 1 c 1800 2 1805 3 1805 4 1807 5 1808 09 6 1808 7 1809 8 1809 9 1800 1810 10 1808 09 Portrait of boxer Jem Belcher wearing a patterned cravat and a double breasted brown coat with a dark fur or velvet collar c 1800 Watercolor of Beau Brummell by Richard Dighton In this self portrait of 1805 Washington Allston wears a tan cravat with his high white collar and dark coat Boston Rubens Peale wears a white waistcoat with a tall upright notched collar over his high shirt collar and wide cravat America 1807 Friedrich von Schiller wears a brown double breasted coat with a contrasting collar and brass buttons The pleated frill of his shirt front can be seen next to the knot of his white cravat Germany 1808 09 Chateaubriand has fashionably tousled hair He wears a long redingote over his coat tan waistcoat white shirt and dark cravat 1808 Count Victor Kochubey s collar reaches his chin and his cravat is wrapped around his neck and tied in a small bow His short hair is casually dressed and falls over his forehead 1809 Portrait of Gwyllym Lloyd Wardle depicts him in a dark coat over a tan waistcoat and high collar and cravat 1809 Elaborate embroidery remained a feature of formal court suits like this one which pairs a red wool coat with a cloth of silver waistcoat both embroidered in silver thread Italy c 1800 1810 Los Angeles County Museum of Art M 80 60a b Portrait of Danish adventurer Jorgen Jorgensen shows how Scandinavian society has viewed men s fashion in the Age of Revolution Style gallery 1810 1820 Edit 1 1810 2 1810 3 1812 13 4 1813 5 1815 6 1816 7 1817 8 1819 Les Modernes Incroyables a satire on French fashions of 1810 long tight breeches or pantaloons short coats with tails and massive cravats Marcotte d Argenteuil wears a high collared shirt with a dark cravat a buff waistcoat a double breasted brown coat with covered buttons and a dark gray overcoat with contrasting collar perhaps sealskin 1810 His bicorne hat lies on the table Daniel la Motte a Baltimore Maryland merchant and landowner strikes a romantic pose that displays details of his white waistcoat frilled shirt and fall front breeches with covered buttons at the knee 1812 13 German physician Johann Abraham Albers wears a striped waistcoat under a black double breasted coat 1813 American artist Samuel Lovett Waldo wears a frilled shirt with a knotted white cravat Lord Grantham wears a double breasted coat which shows a bit of the waistcoat beneath at the waist tight pantaloons tucked into boots and a high collar and cravat 1816 Nicolas Pierre Tiolier wears a rich blue tailcoat and brown fall front trousers over a white waistcoat shirt and cravat His tall hat sits on an antique plinth 1817 Unknown artist wears a double breasted tailcoat with turned back cuffs and a matching high collar of velvet or possibly fur Note that while the man s obvious wasp like torso is not overly emphasized in a caricature like fashion as was often the case in male fashion plates of the day there is a definite and deliberate nipping of the waist It is highly likely that the sitter in this portrait wore some sort of tight laced corset or similar undergarment The coat sleeves are puffed at the shoulder He wears a white waistcoat shirt and cravat and light colored pantaloons 1819 Children s fashion EditBoth boys and girls wore dresses until they were about four or five years old when boys were breeched or put into trousers 63 Mozart s sons 1798 United States 1798 Young girl Paris c 1803 Girls play dresses and bonnets 1804 Skeleton suit c 1806 Skeleton suit 1808 England 1812 United States 1812 England 1815 England 1815 Denmark 1818Revival of Directoire Empire Regency fashions EditDuring the first half of the Victorian era there was a more or less negative view of women s styles of the 1795 1820 period Some people would have felt slightly uncomfortable to be reminded that their mothers or grandmothers had once promenaded about in such styles which could be considered indecent according to Victorian norms and many would have found it somewhat difficult to really empathize with or take seriously the struggles of a heroine of art or literature if they were being constantly reminded that she was wearing such clothes For such reasons some Victorian history paintings of the Napoleonic wars intentionally avoided depicting accurate women s styles see example below Thackeray s illustrations to his book Vanity Fair depicted the women of the 1810s wearing 1840s fashions and in Charlotte Bronte s 1849 novel Shirley set in 1811 1812 neo Grecian fashions are anachronistically relocated to an earlier generation Later in the Victorian period the Regency seemed to retreat to an unthreateningly remote historical distance and Kate Greenaway and the Artistic Dress movement selectively revived elements of early 19th century fashions During the late Victorian and Edwardian periods many genre paintings sentimental valentines etc contained loose depictions of 1795 1820 styles then considered to be quaint relics of a bygone era In the late 1960s early 1970s there was a limited fashion revival of the Empire silhouette In recent years 1795 1820 fashions are most strongly associated with Jane Austen s writings due to the various movie adaptations of her novels There are also some Regency fashion urban myths such as that women dampened their gowns to make them appear even more diaphanous something which was certainly not practiced by the vast majority of women of the period 1 1857 cartoon 2 1868 denial 3 1882 nostalgia 4 Kate GreenawayAn 1857 cartoon making fun of the contemporary distaste for early 19th century clothes Before Waterloo by Henry Nelson O Neil 1868 a mid Victorian painting which deliberately does not show accurate women s styles of 1815 Two Strings to her Bow by John Pettie 1882 a later Victorian genre painting which uses the Regency period for nostalgia value May Day by Kate Greenaway See also EditAlmack s Beau Brummel Corset controversy Dandy History of fashion Lady Caroline Lamb Regency dance Season society White sFootnotes Edit Aaslestad Katherine B Sitten und Mode Fashion Gender and Public Identities in Hamburg at the Turn of the Nineteenth Century Gender in Transition Discourse and Practice in German Speaking Europe University of Michigan Press 2006 Aaslestad Katherine B Sitten und Mode Fashion Gender and Public Identities in Hamburg at the Turn of the Nineteenth Century Gender in Transition Discourse and Practice in German Speaking Europe University of Michigan Press 2006 283 Ribeiro Aileen The Art of Dress Fashion in England and France 1750 1820 Yale University Press 1995 ISBN 0 300 06287 7 Four Hundred Years of Fashion Victoria amp Albert Museum V amp A Publications 1984 p 31 Yalom Marilyn A History of the Breast Knopf New York 1997 a b c d Katherine B Aaslestad Sitten und Mode Fashion Gender and Public Identities in Hamburg at the Turn of the Nineteenth Century Gender in Transition Discourse and Practice in German Speaking Europe University of Michigan Press 2006 282 318 a b c d Betty Bright P Low Of Muslins and Merveilleuses Winterthur Portfolio vol 9 1974 29 75 Noyes Dorothy La Maja Vestida Dress as Resistance to Enlightenment in Late 18th century Madrid Journal of American Folklore vol 111 no 440 1998 197 217 a b Dror Warman The Making of the Modern Self Identity and Culture in Eighteenth Century England Yale University Press 2004 pp 166 189 265 278 Peter McNeil The Appearance of Enlightenment Refashioning the Elites in The Enlightenment Worlds eds Routledge 2004 pp 381 400 The Elizabeth Roslyn Women s Fashion Fashion Plates Illustrations and Watercolours from 1790s to 1810s Retrieved 8 February 2014 a b c d Ashelford J The art of dress Clothes and society 1500 1914 National Trust pp 195 197 Nineteenth Century Industrialization Encyclopedia of Fashion Arnold J Patterns of fashion The cut and construction of clothes for men and women Macmillan Knowles R La Belle Assemblee Regency History a b c Wurst Karin A 2001 Spellbinding The Body as Art Art as Body in the Cultural Practice of Attituden Lessing Yearbook 2001 33 151 181 a b Thomas Pauline Regency amp Romantic Hairstyles and Hats 1800 1840 Fashion History a b c d e f g Payne Blanche 1965 pp 452 455 O Brien Alden Empire Style in The Berg Companion to Fashion ed by Valerie Steele Oxford New York Berg 2010 pp 247 48 a b Davidson Hilary Dress in the Age of Jane Austen Regency Fashion Yale University Press 2019 p 24 Davidson Hilary Dress in the Age of Jane Austen Regency Fashion Yale University Press 2019 p 81 Grigsby Darcy G Nudity a La Grecque The Art Bulletin 80 2 1998 311 35 Mirror of Graces or the English Lady s Costume p 95 Retrieved 4 July 2009 Lubrich Naomi 2015 The Little White Dress Politics and Polyvalence in Revolutionary France in Fashion Theory The Journal of Dress Body and Culture 19 5 Rifelj Carol de Dobay 2010 Coiffures Hair in Nineteenth century French Literature and Culture University of Delaware Press p 35 ISBN 9780874130997 Mirror of Graces or the English Lady s Costume p 89 Retrieved 4 July 2009 Jane Austen Centre Magazine Archived from the original on 2008 04 30 Retrieved 2009 03 15 Regency Fashion and Costume Archived from the original on 2004 03 06 Retrieved 2006 09 02 Davidson Hilary Dress in the Age of Jane Austen Regency Fashion Yale University Press 2019 pp 62 65 Stays V amp A Search the Collections V and A Collections 2021 01 12 Retrieved 2021 01 12 Bodice Palais Galliera Musee de la mode de la Ville de Paris Retrieved 2021 01 12 Brassiere ca 1820 American or European www metmuseum org Retrieved 2021 01 12 Bust bodice V amp A Search the Collections V and A Collections 2021 01 12 Retrieved 2021 01 12 Mirror of Graces or the English Lady s Costume pp 100 101 Retrieved 4 July 2009 Davidson Hilary Dress in the Age of Jane Austen Regency Fashion Yale University Press 2019 pp 66 67 Davidson Hilary Dress in the Age of Jane Austen Regency Fashion Yale University Press 2019 p 67 Nesfield Cookson Mary 1935 The Costume Book New York R M McBride a b Payne Blanche 1965 p 447 449 Andrews Meg Beyond the Fringe Shawls of Paisley Design Victoriana Magazine Jane Austen s Hampshire Archived from the original on 2006 08 13 Retrieved 2006 10 08 Letters of Jane Austen Retrieved 4 July 2009 Musee du Louvre in French Mirror of Graces or the English Lady s Costume p 130 Retrieved 4 July 2009 Bigelow Marybelle S 1979 Fashion in History Western Dress Prehistoric to Present Minneapolis Burgess Publishing Company pp 226 Cheltenham Art Gallery amp Museum a b Cage E Claire 2009 The Sartorial Self Neoclassical Fashion and Gender Identity in France 1797 1804 Eighteenth Century Studies 42 2 193 215 doi 10 1353 ecs 0 0039 S2CID 144480882 a b Hornsby Clare 2000 7 The Impact of Italy The Grand Tour and Beyond The British School at Rome pp 123 146 Freund Amy The Citoyenne Tallien Women Politics and Portraiture during the French Revolution Art Bulletin vol 93 no 3 2011 325 344 Yalom Marilyn A History of the Breast New York Alfred A Knopf 1997 Print Gelpi Barbara C Significant Exposure The Turn of the century Breast Nineteenth Century Contexts 20 2 1997 125 45 Print Morris Eaves Robert N Essick Joseph Viscomi eds Naomi Entreating Ruth and Orpah to Return to the Land of Moab object 1 Butlin 299 Naomi Entreating Ruth and Orpah to Return to the Land of Moab William Blake Archive Retrieved September 26 2013 Cage E Claire 2009 The Srtorial Self Neoclassical Fashion and Gender Identity in France 1797 1804 Eighteenth Century Studies 2 42 2 193 215 doi 10 1353 ecs 0 0039 JSTOR 40264250 S2CID 144480882 Cadeau C December 6 2017 Men s Fashion During the Regency Era 1810s to 1830s All About Canadian History Hollander Anne 1995 Sex and Suits The Evolution of Modern Dress Kodansha p 85 Perl Lila 1990 From Top Hats to Baseball Caps From Bustles to Blue Jeans New York Clarion Books p 33 ISBN 0899198724 Payne Blanche 1965 p 456 Hollander Anne Winter 1992 The Modernization of Fashion Design Quarterly Walker Art Center 154 27 33 doi 10 2307 4091263 JSTOR 4091263 a b Murray 1998 Philip Dwyer 2007 Napoleon The Path to Power 1769 1799 Yale University Press p 472 ISBN 978 0 300 13754 5 Hewson Martha S Cronkite Walter January 1 2009 John Quincy Adams Google Knihy ISBN 978 0 7910 7599 9 Retrieved November 4 2018 Girard Jolyon P October 7 2019 Presidents and Presidencies in American History A Social Political and Cultural Encyclopedia and Document Collection Google Knihy ISBN 9781440865916 Retrieved November 9 2019 Payne Blanche 1965 p 458 Adkins Roy Adkins Lesley 2013 Jane Austen s England Penguin Books Ltd Further reading EditA Lady of Distinction The Mirror of Graces R L Shep 1997 ISBN 0 914046 24 1 Ashelford Jane The Art of Dress Clothing and Society 1500 1914 Abrams 1996 ISBN 0 8109 6317 5 Austen Jane My Dear Cassandra The Illustrated Letters Selected and Introduced by Penelope Hughes Hallett Collins amp Brown 1990 ISBN 1 85585 004 4 Baumgarten Linda What Clothes Reveal The Language of Clothing in Colonial and Federal America Yale University Press 2002 ISBN 0 300 09580 5 Black J Anderson and Madge Garland A History of Fashion Morrow 1975 ISBN 0 688 02893 4 Bourhis Katell le The Age of Napoleon Costume from Revolution to Empire 1789 1815 Metropolitan Museum of Art 1989 ISBN 0870995707 Campbell Cynthia The Most Polished Gentleman George IV and the Women in His Life A Kudos Book 1995 ISBN 1 86052 003 0 de Marly Diana Working Dress A History of Occupational Clothing Batsford UK 1986 Holmes amp Meier US 1987 ISBN 0 8419 1111 8 Freund Amy The Citoyenne Tallien Women Politics and Portraiture during the French Revolution Art Bulletin vol 93 no 3 2011 325 344 Hughes Kristine Everyday Life in Regency and Victorian England From 1811 1901 Writer s Digest Books 1998 ISBN 0 89879 812 4 Lubrich Naomi The Little White Dress Politics and Polyvalence in Revolutionary France in Fashion Theory The Journal of Dress Body and Culture 19 5 2015 Murray Venetia High Society A social History of the Regency Period 1788 1830 Viking 1998 ISBN 0 670 85758 0 Payne Blanche History of Costume from the Ancient Egyptians to the Twentieth Century Harper amp Row 1965 No ISBN for this edition ASIN B0006BMNFS Rothstein Natalie editor A Lady of Fashion Barbara Johnson s Album of Styles and Fabrics Norton 1987 ISBN 0 500 01419 1 Simond Louis An American in Regency England Pergamon Press 1968 ISBN 0 08 007074 4 Tozer Jane and Sarah Levitt Fabric of Society A Century of People and their Clothes 1770 1870 Laura Ashley Press ISBN 0 9508913 0 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w 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