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Bands (neckwear)

Bands[a] are a form of formal neckwear, worn by some clergy and lawyers, and with some forms of academic dress. They take the form of two oblong pieces of cloth, usually though not invariably white, which are tied to the neck. When worn by clergy, they typically are attached to a clerical collar. The word bands is usually plural because they require two similar parts and did not come as one piece of cloth.[b] Those worn by clergy are often called preaching bands or Geneva bands;[c] those worn by lawyers are called barrister's bands or, more usually in Ireland and Canada, tabs.

Two pairs of starched bands, as made by Shepherd & Woodward and Ede & Ravenscroft

The two bands are sometimes said to symbolize the two tablets of the Ten Commandments given by God to Moses.[1][dubious ]

Ruffs were popular in the sixteenth century, and remained so until the late 1640s, alongside the more fashionable standing and falling bands. Ruffs, like bands, were sewn to a fairly deep neck-band. They could be either standing or falling ruffs.[2] Standing ruffs were common with legal, and official dress till comparatively late. Falling ruffs were popular c. 1615 – c. 1640s.[2]

Origin edit

 
John Witherspoon, an 18th-century Presbyterian minister, wearing preaching bands
 
The 18th-century jurist William Blackstone, depicted here wearing a long, square drop collar

In the early sixteenth century bands referred to the shirt neck-band under a ruff. For the rest of the century, when ruffs were still worn, and in the seventeenth century, bands referred to all the variations of this neckwear. All bands or collars arose from a standing neck-band of varying heights. They were tied at the throat with band-strings ending in tiny tassels or crochet-covered balls.

Bands were adopted in England for legal, official, ecclesiastical, and academical use in the mid-seventeenth century. They varied from those worn by priests (very long, of cambric[d] or linen, and reaching over the chest), to the much shorter ecclesiastical bands of black gauze with white hem showing on the outside. Both were developments of the seventeenth century lay collar.[3]

Clerical, legal and academic costume edit

Bands varied from small white turn-down collars and ruffs to point lace bands, depending upon fashion, until the mid-seventeenth century, when plain white bands came to be the invariable neck-wear of all judges, serjeants, barristers, students, clergy, and academics.[e]

The bands are two strips of bleached holland[f] or similar material, falling down the front from the collar. Plain linen 'falling bands', developed from the falling collar, replaced the ruff about 1640.[g] By 1650 they were universal. Originally in the form of a wide collar, tied with a lace in front, by the 1680s they had diminished to the traditional form of two rectangles of linen tied at the throat.

 
Jean-Baptiste de La Salle, a Roman Catholic priest, wearing preaching bands

Bands did not become academically significant until they were abandoned as an ordinary lay fashion after the Restoration in 1660. They became identified as specifically applicable to clerical, legal and academic individuals in the early eighteenth century, when they became longer and narrower in form.

For a time from the eighteenth century judges and King's Counsel took to wearing lace jabots at courts and leveés. Bands are now worn as court dress by judges, King's Counsel, barristers, solicitor advocates, court officials, and as ceremonial/formal dress by certain public officials, university officials and less frequently also by graduands (for example, they are compulsory for male Cambridge graduands, worn with a white bow tie, and optional for women). These specifically form part of the full dress of circuit judges, Court of Appeal judges and the Lord Chief Justice.[h] Mourning bands, which have a double pleat running down the middle of each wing or tongue, are still used by some barristers, clergy and officials.

By the end of the seventeenth century King's Counsel wore richly laced cravats. From the later part of the eighteenth century they wore bands instead of the cravat as undress.[7] In the eighteenth century a lace fall was often used as an alternative to the bands by judges in full dress.[4]

Both falling and standing bands were usually white, lace or lace-edged cambric or silk, but both might be plain.[8]

The standing bands, a semi-circular collar, the curved edge standing up round the back of the head. While the straight horizontal edges in front met under the chin and were tied by band-strings, the collar occasionally was worn turned down. It was supported on a wire frame attached to the neck of the doublet behind. The starched collar rested on this. It was usually of linen, but also lawn[i] and lace.[9][page needed] They were popular for a quarter of a century.

 
A Methodist minister wearing a cassock, vested with a surplice and stole, with preaching bands attached to his clerical collar

The soft, unstiffened collar draped over the shoulders of the doublet were called falling-bands. Until the Civil War barristers wore falling bands, also known as a rabat, with about six tabs arranged one upon the other, and having the appearance of ruffs rather than bands. They differed from the bands of the clergy of that period in that they were not poked as the latter were. Lawyers took to modern bands about the middle of the seventeenth century.[10] They continued in ecclesiastical use well into the nineteenth century in the smaller, linen strip or tab form- short-bands. These are retained by some priests of the Church of England, academics, lawyers, and ministers of the Church of Scotland, the Presbyterian Church in Ireland, and the English non-conformist churches, such as the Methodist tradition.

Bands were adopted early in the eighteenth century by parish clerks and many dissenting ministers, as well as in Western Europe by junior Catholic clergymen/readers and those of many Protestant churches, soon followed by those in the lands governed/co-governed and settled overseas. The bands were fairly wide, set close together. The outer white edge is the hemmed linen fabric which, being turned over onto itself three times, is opaque.[11]

 
A Lutheran pastor wearing preaching bands while administering confirmation to youth

The falling bands, worn 1540s to 1670s, could take three forms. Firstly, a small turned-down collar from a high neck-band, with an inverted v-or pyramidal-shaped spread under the chin and tied by band-strings sometimes visible but usually concealed.[j] They were plain, or lace edged. These were popular 1590 to 1605, especially in military or Puritan circles, reappearing 1620–1650, when they were usually larger. Secondly, they could take the form of a wide collar, spreading horizontally from side to side across the shoulder, with the band-strings as formerly. These were popular 1630s to 1640s. Thirdly, a deep collar or bib, square-cut, spreading down the chest, the front borders meeting edge to edge flat, or with an inverted box-pleat. The corners were square or frequently rounded after 1660. Broad lace borders were usual. With the band-strings as formerly, these were popular 1640s to 1670s.[9][page needed]

Relation to neckties edit

The cravat or neckcloth was popular 1665–1730.[8] It was a large square or triangle of linen, lawn, silk, or muslin,[k] often starched, with the ends usually bordered with lace, or decorated with tasselled beads, and tied loosely beneath the chin. Formal cravats were always plain white, otherwise they could be coloured or patterned. Tying the cravat in a bow was popular circa 1665. Fastening with a cravat-string was popular circa 1671. By 1680–1690 the cravat was worn falling over a stiffened ornamental cravat-string. The years 1695–1700 saw the Steinkirk style, with the front ends twisted and the terminals either passed through a buttonhole or attached with a brooch to one side of the coat. The cravat was popular until the 1740s, and with the elderly thereafter.

In the 1840s several types of cravat were in use, the most traditional being a large bow with pointed ends. The variety of neckwear became very much greater in the 1890s. The scarf, formerly known as the kerchief, was also worn. In the 1890s neckties became popular, commonly in a butterfly- or batswing-shape bow.[l] By the 1850s separate, starched, collars were standard, these reaching three inches in height by the 1890s.

Until about 1950, apart from short-sleeved, open-necked sports wear, day shirts always had a long sleeve with cuffs, closed by links or buttons, and with a neck-band with separate collar fastened by studs, or an attached collar. The attached collar is now dominant.[14] The result is that bands are rarely used by graduates, who prefer the contemporary down turn collar and neck tie.

Notes edit

  1. ^ According to the Oxford English Dictionary, since the eighteenth century these have been called bands rather than by the singular band.
  2. ^ It is similar to jeans, another form of clothing that goes by the plural.
  3. ^ In some Reformed churches a preacher's bands may be worn with a Geneva gown.
  4. ^ A fine light- or medium-weight plain batiste weave, usually of cotton, but also linen. Finished with a stiffer, brighter smoother finish. Finer cambrics are converted from heavier lawn-type cloths, cheaper cambrics from carded-yarn print cloths which are back-filled with china clay and starched for weight and appearance. Batiste is a highly mercerized, soft-finished, lightweight, combed-yarn, converted, lawn-type fabric, bleached, dyed, and printed. It is used for women's and children's lingerie, nightgowns, summer dresses, infants' wear, lining.
  5. ^ They were also worn by attorneys whilst the latter were members of the inns of court.[4]
  6. ^ A linen fabric woven from the fibres of flax, holland is a fine white linen lawn, first made in Holland. It was used for mourning cuffs and head-dresses before the introduction of white mourning crape in the early nineteenth century and white cotton muslin in the late eighteenth century.[5] Mourning crape, or crepe anglais as it was called in France, was a transparent crimped dull black and white silk gauze, made by Courtaulds until production ceased in 1940.[6]
  7. ^ The falling collar, which had the collar turned down on the shoulders, was developed in the early seventeenth century. This largely replaced the ruff, although that continued well into the seventeenth century. Towards the end of the sixteenth century the ruff was sometimes worn open in front rather than completely encircling the neck. Both types of ruff retained the deep projecting starched frill of several separately goffered folds of linen or muslin, and supporting standard, which arose in the sixteenth century.
  8. ^ In a practice reminiscent of the University of Oxford, where certain senior officers wear bands with white bow ties, and the University of Cambridge where all graduands wear both bands and white bow ties, the wearing of both bands and jabot by King's Counsel is an odd duplication. The bow tie was developed from the cravat, introduced in the mid-seventeenth century. This was an alternative to the fall lace or jabot, and was of linen or muslin, with broad edges of lace. It varied from the tied lace cravat with long flowing ends, to an elaborate folded and lightly starched linen or cambric necktie of lace, used in the late eighteenth century to the early nineteenth century. These eventually became the modern necktie. The jabot itself was an atrophied form of the starched and elaborate ruff, which developed in fifty years from the lace-edged, frilled, exposed linen chemise. It is not an especially modern error which sees bands and necktie worn together. In 1770 non-doctors and DMus at Oxford were required to wear (very small) bands and cravat; all other doctors: bands alone.
  9. ^ A very light, fine, translucent, smooth, hard handling, plain woven fabric of linen now cotton or synthetic. Lawn usually more closely woven and stiffer than cambric.
  10. ^ Band-strings were the ties used for fastening neckwear,[12] whether bands or ruffs.
  11. ^ Of the several varieties of plain weave cotton cloth, the thin batiste and nainsook, rather than the heavy sheeting such as longcloth and percale. Muslin, or muzline, is a finely woven, lightweight cotton fabric with a downy surface. Named after the town of Mosul, near Nineveh, it was introduced into England from India circa 1670. Machine-made by the 1780s, it gradually replaced linen hollands and cambrics.[13]
  12. ^ Popular for evening wear in a white material such as piqué, a stiff, ribbed cotton fabric. This is the shape modern neckties are tied in. In the early twentieth century the "bow" tie was more popular, from the 1920s the knotted one.

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Kusi, Cynthia Agyeiwaa; Quansah, Sarah Asheley; Boakye-Yiadom, Fredrick (2019). "'Decoding' the Clerical Vestments of the Methodist Bishop in Charge of Sekondi Dioceses". Fashion and Textiles Review. 1 (2): 83.
  2. ^ a b Cunnington & Cunnington 1972, pp. 34–35.
  3. ^ Hargreaves-Mawdsley 1963, p. 40.
  4. ^ a b Hargreaves-Mawdsley 1963, p. 66.
  5. ^ Beck 1886, p. 164.
  6. ^ Beck 1886, p. 70.
  7. ^ Hargreaves-Mawdsley 1963, p. 86.
  8. ^ a b Cunnington & Cunnington 1972, p. 34.
  9. ^ a b Cunnington & Cunnington 1972.
  10. ^ Hargreaves-Mawdsley 1963, p. 90.
  11. ^ Mayo 1984.
  12. ^ Planché 2003, p. 33.
  13. ^ Beck 1886, p. 231.
  14. ^ Sichel 1978, p. 16.

Bibliography edit

  • Beck, William (1886). The Draper's Dictionary. London: The Warehousemen and Drapers Journal.
  • Cunnington, C. Willett; Cunnington, Phillis (1972) [1955]. Handbook of English Costume in the 17th Century (3rd ed.). London: Faber & Faber.
  • Hargreaves-Mawdsley, W. N. (1963). A History of Legal Dress in Europe until the End of the Eighteenth Century. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Mayo, Janet (1984). A History of Ecclesiastical Dress. New York: Holmes & Meier Publishers.
  • Planché, James Robinson (2003) [1876]. An Illustrated Dictionary of Historic Costume: From the First Century B.C. to c. 1760. Mineola, New York: Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-42323-4.
  • Sichel, Marion (1978). Costume Reference. Batsford. ISBN 978-0-7134-1507-0.

Further reading edit

  • Cox, Noel (2000). . Academical Dress in New Zealand. Archived from the original on 27 October 2009. Retrieved 12 March 2018.

bands, neckwear, bands, form, formal, neckwear, worn, some, clergy, lawyers, with, some, forms, academic, dress, they, take, form, oblong, pieces, cloth, usually, though, invariably, white, which, tied, neck, when, worn, clergy, they, typically, attached, cler. Bands a are a form of formal neckwear worn by some clergy and lawyers and with some forms of academic dress They take the form of two oblong pieces of cloth usually though not invariably white which are tied to the neck When worn by clergy they typically are attached to a clerical collar The word bands is usually plural because they require two similar parts and did not come as one piece of cloth b Those worn by clergy are often called preaching bands or Geneva bands c those worn by lawyers are called barrister s bands or more usually in Ireland and Canada tabs Two pairs of starched bands as made by Shepherd amp Woodward and Ede amp Ravenscroft The two bands are sometimes said to symbolize the two tablets of the Ten Commandments given by God to Moses 1 dubious discuss Ruffs were popular in the sixteenth century and remained so until the late 1640s alongside the more fashionable standing and falling bands Ruffs like bands were sewn to a fairly deep neck band They could be either standing or falling ruffs 2 Standing ruffs were common with legal and official dress till comparatively late Falling ruffs were popular c 1615 c 1640s 2 Contents 1 Origin 2 Clerical legal and academic costume 3 Relation to neckties 4 Notes 5 References 5 1 Footnotes 5 2 Bibliography 6 Further readingOrigin edit nbsp John Witherspoon an 18th century Presbyterian minister wearing preaching bands nbsp The 18th century jurist William Blackstone depicted here wearing a long square drop collar In the early sixteenth century bands referred to the shirt neck band under a ruff For the rest of the century when ruffs were still worn and in the seventeenth century bands referred to all the variations of this neckwear All bands or collars arose from a standing neck band of varying heights They were tied at the throat with band strings ending in tiny tassels or crochet covered balls Bands were adopted in England for legal official ecclesiastical and academical use in the mid seventeenth century They varied from those worn by priests very long of cambric d or linen and reaching over the chest to the much shorter ecclesiastical bands of black gauze with white hem showing on the outside Both were developments of the seventeenth century lay collar 3 Clerical legal and academic costume editBands varied from small white turn down collars and ruffs to point lace bands depending upon fashion until the mid seventeenth century when plain white bands came to be the invariable neck wear of all judges serjeants barristers students clergy and academics e The bands are two strips of bleached holland f or similar material falling down the front from the collar Plain linen falling bands developed from the falling collar replaced the ruff about 1640 g By 1650 they were universal Originally in the form of a wide collar tied with a lace in front by the 1680s they had diminished to the traditional form of two rectangles of linen tied at the throat nbsp Jean Baptiste de La Salle a Roman Catholic priest wearing preaching bands Bands did not become academically significant until they were abandoned as an ordinary lay fashion after the Restoration in 1660 They became identified as specifically applicable to clerical legal and academic individuals in the early eighteenth century when they became longer and narrower in form For a time from the eighteenth century judges and King s Counsel took to wearing lace jabots at courts and levees Bands are now worn as court dress by judges King s Counsel barristers solicitor advocates court officials and as ceremonial formal dress by certain public officials university officials and less frequently also by graduands for example they are compulsory for male Cambridge graduands worn with a white bow tie and optional for women These specifically form part of the full dress of circuit judges Court of Appeal judges and the Lord Chief Justice h Mourning bands which have a double pleat running down the middle of each wing or tongue are still used by some barristers clergy and officials By the end of the seventeenth century King s Counsel wore richly laced cravats From the later part of the eighteenth century they wore bands instead of the cravat as undress 7 In the eighteenth century a lace fall was often used as an alternative to the bands by judges in full dress 4 Both falling and standing bands were usually white lace or lace edged cambric or silk but both might be plain 8 The standing bands a semi circular collar the curved edge standing up round the back of the head While the straight horizontal edges in front met under the chin and were tied by band strings the collar occasionally was worn turned down It was supported on a wire frame attached to the neck of the doublet behind The starched collar rested on this It was usually of linen but also lawn i and lace 9 page needed They were popular for a quarter of a century nbsp A Methodist minister wearing a cassock vested with a surplice and stole with preaching bands attached to his clerical collar The soft unstiffened collar draped over the shoulders of the doublet were called falling bands Until the Civil War barristers wore falling bands also known as a rabat with about six tabs arranged one upon the other and having the appearance of ruffs rather than bands They differed from the bands of the clergy of that period in that they were not poked as the latter were Lawyers took to modern bands about the middle of the seventeenth century 10 They continued in ecclesiastical use well into the nineteenth century in the smaller linen strip or tab form short bands These are retained by some priests of the Church of England academics lawyers and ministers of the Church of Scotland the Presbyterian Church in Ireland and the English non conformist churches such as the Methodist tradition Bands were adopted early in the eighteenth century by parish clerks and many dissenting ministers as well as in Western Europe by junior Catholic clergymen readers and those of many Protestant churches soon followed by those in the lands governed co governed and settled overseas The bands were fairly wide set close together The outer white edge is the hemmed linen fabric which being turned over onto itself three times is opaque 11 nbsp A Lutheran pastor wearing preaching bands while administering confirmation to youth The falling bands worn 1540s to 1670s could take three forms Firstly a small turned down collar from a high neck band with an inverted v or pyramidal shaped spread under the chin and tied by band strings sometimes visible but usually concealed j They were plain or lace edged These were popular 1590 to 1605 especially in military or Puritan circles reappearing 1620 1650 when they were usually larger Secondly they could take the form of a wide collar spreading horizontally from side to side across the shoulder with the band strings as formerly These were popular 1630s to 1640s Thirdly a deep collar or bib square cut spreading down the chest the front borders meeting edge to edge flat or with an inverted box pleat The corners were square or frequently rounded after 1660 Broad lace borders were usual With the band strings as formerly these were popular 1640s to 1670s 9 page needed Relation to neckties editThe cravat or neckcloth was popular 1665 1730 8 It was a large square or triangle of linen lawn silk or muslin k often starched with the ends usually bordered with lace or decorated with tasselled beads and tied loosely beneath the chin Formal cravats were always plain white otherwise they could be coloured or patterned Tying the cravat in a bow was popular circa 1665 Fastening with a cravat string was popular circa 1671 By 1680 1690 the cravat was worn falling over a stiffened ornamental cravat string The years 1695 1700 saw the Steinkirk style with the front ends twisted and the terminals either passed through a buttonhole or attached with a brooch to one side of the coat The cravat was popular until the 1740s and with the elderly thereafter In the 1840s several types of cravat were in use the most traditional being a large bow with pointed ends The variety of neckwear became very much greater in the 1890s The scarf formerly known as the kerchief was also worn In the 1890s neckties became popular commonly in a butterfly or batswing shape bow l By the 1850s separate starched collars were standard these reaching three inches in height by the 1890s Until about 1950 apart from short sleeved open necked sports wear day shirts always had a long sleeve with cuffs closed by links or buttons and with a neck band with separate collar fastened by studs or an attached collar The attached collar is now dominant 14 The result is that bands are rarely used by graduates who prefer the contemporary down turn collar and neck tie Notes edit According to the Oxford English Dictionary since the eighteenth century these have been called bands rather than by the singular band It is similar to jeans another form of clothing that goes by the plural In some Reformed churches a preacher s bands may be worn with a Geneva gown A fine light or medium weight plain batiste weave usually of cotton but also linen Finished with a stiffer brighter smoother finish Finer cambrics are converted from heavier lawn type cloths cheaper cambrics from carded yarn print cloths which are back filled with china clay and starched for weight and appearance Batiste is a highly mercerized soft finished lightweight combed yarn converted lawn type fabric bleached dyed and printed It is used for women s and children s lingerie nightgowns summer dresses infants wear lining They were also worn by attorneys whilst the latter were members of the inns of court 4 A linen fabric woven from the fibres of flax holland is a fine white linen lawn first made in Holland It was used for mourning cuffs and head dresses before the introduction of white mourning crape in the early nineteenth century and white cotton muslin in the late eighteenth century 5 Mourning crape or crepe anglais as it was called in France was a transparent crimped dull black and white silk gauze made by Courtaulds until production ceased in 1940 6 The falling collar which had the collar turned down on the shoulders was developed in the early seventeenth century This largely replaced the ruff although that continued well into the seventeenth century Towards the end of the sixteenth century the ruff was sometimes worn open in front rather than completely encircling the neck Both types of ruff retained the deep projecting starched frill of several separately goffered folds of linen or muslin and supporting standard which arose in the sixteenth century In a practice reminiscent of the University of Oxford where certain senior officers wear bands with white bow ties and the University of Cambridge where all graduands wear both bands and white bow ties the wearing of both bands and jabot by King s Counsel is an odd duplication The bow tie was developed from the cravat introduced in the mid seventeenth century This was an alternative to the fall lace or jabot and was of linen or muslin with broad edges of lace It varied from the tied lace cravat with long flowing ends to an elaborate folded and lightly starched linen or cambric necktie of lace used in the late eighteenth century to the early nineteenth century These eventually became the modern necktie The jabot itself was an atrophied form of the starched and elaborate ruff which developed in fifty years from the lace edged frilled exposed linen chemise It is not an especially modern error which sees bands and necktie worn together In 1770 non doctors and DMus at Oxford were required to wear very small bands and cravat all other doctors bands alone A very light fine translucent smooth hard handling plain woven fabric of linen now cotton or synthetic Lawn usually more closely woven and stiffer than cambric Band strings were the ties used for fastening neckwear 12 whether bands or ruffs Of the several varieties of plain weave cotton cloth the thin batiste and nainsook rather than the heavy sheeting such as longcloth and percale Muslin or muzline is a finely woven lightweight cotton fabric with a downy surface Named after the town of Mosul near Nineveh it was introduced into England from India circa 1670 Machine made by the 1780s it gradually replaced linen hollands and cambrics 13 Popular for evening wear in a white material such as pique a stiff ribbed cotton fabric This is the shape modern neckties are tied in In the early twentieth century the bow tie was more popular from the 1920s the knotted one References editFootnotes edit Kusi Cynthia Agyeiwaa Quansah Sarah Asheley Boakye Yiadom Fredrick 2019 Decoding the Clerical Vestments of the Methodist Bishop in Charge of Sekondi Dioceses Fashion and Textiles Review 1 2 83 a b Cunnington amp Cunnington 1972 pp 34 35 Hargreaves Mawdsley 1963 p 40 a b Hargreaves Mawdsley 1963 p 66 Beck 1886 p 164 Beck 1886 p 70 Hargreaves Mawdsley 1963 p 86 a b Cunnington amp Cunnington 1972 p 34 a b Cunnington amp Cunnington 1972 Hargreaves Mawdsley 1963 p 90 Mayo 1984 Planche 2003 p 33 Beck 1886 p 231 Sichel 1978 p 16 Bibliography edit Beck William 1886 The Draper s Dictionary London The Warehousemen and Drapers Journal Cunnington C Willett Cunnington Phillis 1972 1955 Handbook of English Costume in the 17th Century 3rd ed London Faber amp Faber Hargreaves Mawdsley W N 1963 A History of Legal Dress in Europe until the End of the Eighteenth Century Oxford Clarendon Press Mayo Janet 1984 A History of Ecclesiastical Dress New York Holmes amp Meier Publishers Planche James Robinson 2003 1876 An Illustrated Dictionary of Historic Costume From the First Century B C to c 1760 Mineola New York Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 42323 4 Sichel Marion 1978 Costume Reference Batsford ISBN 978 0 7134 1507 0 Further reading edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bands neckwear Cox Noel 2000 Bands Academical Dress in New Zealand Archived from the original on 27 October 2009 Retrieved 12 March 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bands neckwear amp oldid 1168836867, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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