Difference between revisions of "General Everyday Clothing"
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Latest revision as of 08:48, 14 February 2010
Contents
1830 - 1840
1836-40 | ||
1841 - 1850
1840s | ||
Small waists were a feature of mid 19th century fashions for men as well as women, male corsets were available for those who wanted them, although tailoring could help achieve this look. This fitted waistcoat would have been worn with a long fitted coat and slim fitting trousers. |
Late 1840s | ||
Left sister: A centre parting with ringlets was a popular 1840s hairstyle. This sister's sleeves are set slighty below the natural shoulder line and the flared shape is a precursor to the later "pagoda" sleeve of the 1850s. Here they are worn with "engageantes" - a detachable false undersleeve. | Right sister: A wide off the shoulder neckline is made more modest by the use of a black lace jacket, and the tiered dress gives it more fullness than her sister's. Both dresses would have been worn with several petticoats The gold adornment is an original feature on the photograph. |
1851 - 1860
Early 1850s | ||
This lady was born in 1794. She wears a plaid patterned bonnet, and a lace collar over a loose fitting jacket that does not match the skirt. She wears black net gloves. |
1850s | ||
Pagoda sleeves as seen on this dress became fashionable in the 1850s, though her hairstyle is more old fashioned. The curls would have dropped put very easily in damp weather. She is the woman seen on the right of the picture of two sisters in the 1840s section. |
1850s | ||
This lady was born in 1794 and died in 1862. Her dress has pagoda sleeves and deep fringing below the braid; her dark bonnet and the dark braid suggest mourning or half mourning. Her black net gloves are of the fingerless sort. |
1853-6 | ||
1861 - 1870
Early 1860s | ||
Elizabeth was born in 1824. Note the hair covers her ears; in the late 1860's the ears were shown. She is also wearing "engageantes" - false white detacheable sleeves which were easily removed for laundering. These were introduced during the 1850's. |
Early 1860s | ||
Early 1860s | ||
Sarah Richardson nee Awty (my gt gt grandmother) who died in 1879. She was the wife of a printer and publisher in Greenwich. If you look closely you will also notice that she has a large goitre on her neck. |
Early 1860s | ||
Sarah Richardson's husband, Henry S Richardson - a publisher and printer in Greenwich |
1860s | ||
1860s | ||
1863-65 | ||
Srong colours were now available, aniline dyes were created during this period, red had been the first in 1859, followed by black and blue in 1863. |
1871 - 1880
Early 1870s | ||
Elizabeth was born in 1814, and was a well off grocer's wife. This photo was taken in Margate in the 1870's, presumably on holiday as she lived in New Cross, south London. The dress is silk, with detachable lace collar. The chain appears to be for a watch as is goes into a tiny pocket. |
1870s | ||
William wore exactly the same coat in the photo below in 1882. Here, as a younger and more confident looking leather factor holidaying in Margate he wears it undone to show off his stylish waistcoat and cravat held with a large tiepin. |
1874 | ||
Sarah aged 25 was both daughter and wife of Lancashire weavers; she is holding her second child. Her dress is ornamented with a knobbly V shaped braid at the neck, the three ruffles at the bottom of the dress are only slightly gathered, a sign of less wealth as more expensive clothes had more ornamental decoration. The child on her lap is a boy. |
c1875 | ||
A silk mercer's daughter on holiday in Margate. |
1875 | ||
c1878 | ||
A Vicar and his wife with a child relative; all from a fairly well to do family. |
c1880 | ||
c1880 | ||
c1880 | ||
c1880 | ||
Jane was a leather factor's wife, though before her marriage she had been a braider employing 6 hands and later a children's dressmaker so she would have been capable of making the lace, tassels and multi layered trimmings that adorn her dress. She appears to be holding a piece of knitting or crochet work. The top edge of her corset is clearly visible under the fabric at her bustline. |
1881 - 1890
1880s | ||
1881 | ||
c1880s | ||
1881-2 | ||
Maria's dress is heavily ornamented with "passmenterie" a form of decoration also used in furnishing at the time characterised by tassels, ruffles, braids and large ornamental buttons. The dress is drawn in to a bustle at the back. Her bodice is worn with a deep lace collar and she has a chatelaine pinned to her ample bosom with 4 chains tucked into a side pocket. | The photographers were in partnership from 1881, Maria died in 1882 which gives a relatively short period for this photograph to have been taken. A lady of her age may not have been up to date with the latest fashions, she seems have had the dress as "best" for a while. The family appear to have holidayed in Margate as her home at this time was in the village of Ightham, Kent. |
1882 | ||
The baby was born 11 March 1882, which helps date the picture to the summer or autumn of that year. William on the far right had owned this coat for a while, and chose to wear it buttoned, compare with the picture in the previous decade where he looks more casual. In 1882 he has chosen a tie like the modern ones we all know rather than a cravat and tiepin. |
1885 | ||
The corset is a maternity corset, it has additional lacing at the sides to allow for the wearer's changing shape. A cotton chemise is worn underneath. The draws have an open crotch as was normal at the time. Petticoats would be worn over the bustle. |
1888 | ||
While her nephew wears the very popular sailor suit, aunt has a tightly fitted bodice with a lace jabot at the neck held by a brooch. |
c1890 | ||
My great great grandmother, Pattie Sophia Davenport |
c1890 | ||
Harriet, from Kenilworth, Warwickshire. She married in 1902 aged 25. Possible taken for her 21st Birthday. |
1891 - 1900
Early 1890s | ||
Elizabeth b 1843 married her cousin John Paternoster, a gamekeeper so they were a working class family.The photo would have been taken in early 1890's. Plain suits with little ornamentation except perhaps a brooch on the collar and the hair tied back in a bun with no fringe was the order of the day. |
Early 1890s | ||
Florence died in 1896. She has a small lace collar, the bodice is beaded with a pattern of diamonds, the front fastenings are concealed. |
1890s | ||
No idea when this photo was taken of my Grandfather's sister. She was born c.1871 East Lulworth.
She married in London in 1902, had 3 children but sadly died at the age of 36, 1907, London. |
c1893 | ||
Revd. Arthur Simmonds Mammatt and his family. The boys were born in 1888 and 1890. |
c1895 | ||
Emma, b 1876, married Jacob Stechmann a tailor in West Ham in 1898 but I believe this photo to have been taken in 1895-6. Collars were high and with a ruffle or lace under the stiff outer. Emma's father was a sailor and then a railway porter so again they were a working class family. |
c1895 | ||
Ezekiel Paternoster b 1810 (far rhs with bushy white beard) was my 2nd Great Grandfather. He was an agricultural labourer on an estate in Rushmere St Andrew, Suffolk. The hip length capes of the ladies are very masculine and functional as befitted their country style of living. However, this was the era of La Belle Epoque and in high society the capes were embellished with embroidery, lace and beading etc and were much more frivolous in appearance. The double layered cape worn by the 3rd lady from the left was introduced in 1894. The little round hats that they are wearing date from late 1880's. |
Late 1890s | ||
Born 1871, married in 1896, possibly taken on honeymoon. |
c1897 | ||
1898 | ||
c1899 | ||
late 1890s | ||
My great grandmother's daughter in law in the late 1890's. She died aged 59 in 1900. Note the aspidista in the background. |
Late 1890s | ||
The dress, in silk, has "leg of mutton" sleeves ruched at the top and decorated with blue velvet. The bodice is hand stitched and mounted on a boned calico lining, fastening with 12 hooks into hand sewn eyelets hidden by the front pleating. Some gores of the original skirt remain and this was lined with stiff cotton net and trimmed with the same velvet. Another bodice once existed (one sleeve pictured below which also shows the original colour), although all that remains are the sleeves and left front, as the dress was given by an elderly lady to a young woman to be unpicked for reuse during the 1940s. |
C1900 | ||
Sarah in all her finery.
Not sure when this picture was taken, but I think it was before she married. She was born in 1880 and married in 1903. She trained as a milliner and eventually opened her own milliner's shop in the old centre of Bristol where she worked until she retired in 1953 approx. I can just vaguely remember the shop, walking betweeen the counters with the hat stands high above me when I was about 4 or 5years old. |
1901 - 1910
1901-1910 | ||
A Chief Constable doing his duty! - to the far left of the photo. The rest is a hunting party of nobility + others! |
1903 | ||
1904 | ||
Pictured ourside their cottage in Corston nr Bath. Men are wearing button holes as if ready for a wedding. |
1904 | ||
Family group of 4 generations of the same family. MY father is the babe in arms, my grandmother born 1878 is holding him, the lady to the left of the picture is my gt Grandmother born 1851 and her mother my gt gt grandmother born 1821 is on the right of the picture. They came from a solid upper middle class family. Personally I think that my grandmother's dress is beautiful and I feel that it must have been either her wedding dress (she married in 1901) or definitely her best dress. |
C1905 | ||
Grandma & Granddad, who died long before I was born, and my Uncle Archie born 26th Dec 1904 |
c1908 | ||
This photo is my Grandmother and her youngest sister. The child, Rosie, was born in 1903 and my Grandmother in 1890 suggesting a date of about 1908. They were an East End family (Bethnal Green) and the photo was taken in the studio of F Butler, 98 Armagh Rd, Bow, E London. |
1909 | ||
A middle class family group on holiday. |
1909 | ||
My Father is the small boy pictured at the front, on the right. |
1909 | ||
1910 | ||
This photo shows the younger ladies wearing simple skirts and blouses. Often they were worn with a straw boater or wide brimmed hats for very special occasions. I think Grandma was left back in the 1890's!! |
1910 | ||
Notice the exposed neck instead of the high necked blouses favoured around that time. |
C1910 | ||
James Pollard born Apr 1889 in Dublin city Ireland.
I'm guessing that he was aged about 21 when this photo was taken. |
1910 | ||
"Best wishes Christmas 1910" was written on the back of this card. |
1911 - 1920
c1911 | ||
Joseph is living with his sister and brother in Law in Drumcondra, Dublin on the 1911 Ireland census aged 24 |
c1912 | ||
They have dressed in their best clothes for the photographer. The mother's hairstyle is given volume by the means of pads usually made of horsehair and often known as "rats". |
1913 | ||
The seated, older lady favours a more structured blouse with a high collar while her stepdaughters favour soft collars and a less corseted look. Harty (right) has a more masculine style, her tie has a tiepin with an "H", she also wears a wristwatch. |
1913 | ||
The eldest sister (left) keeps a high collar while her younger sisters prefer lower collars. |
1913 | ||
Note that the mother still has a high collar whilst her daughter is wearing a softer lower collar. |
1913 | ||
My 2x great grandparents, Thomas and Alice Violet Connelly are sitting at the front. See how the daughters all have shorter sleeves whilst their mother wears longer sleeves |
1915 | ||
c1915 | ||
The older couple are my 2x great grandparents, George Edwin and Jane Ann Gregory. Their daughter, Elizabeth Jane is far left and she is my great grandmother. |
1916 | ||
Kate Amelia Slater (nee Jerome) |
1917 | ||
Baby girl aged 1 year, boy aged 3 years. |
1917 | ||
Beatrice aged 33 has mixed the newer fashion of soft collared more open necked blouse with a high necked lace or net one underneath, maybe just for "modesty" as her husband was 20 years her senior. |
1918 | ||
c1919 | ||
My grandmother and her children, in their normal everyday clothes. |
c1920 | ||
My great grandmother, Dorothy Elizabeth Downes with her mother, Esther Downes (formerly Bradbury) |
c1920 | ||
I love his shoe laces, apparantly he used to iron them. |
1921 - 1930
c1921/22 | ||
1923 | ||
This photo is of my mother, her brother and my grandparents. For the first time ever in Britain ladies showed their ankles!! For many the hair was cut short. |
1925 | ||
1927 | ||
My Nan and her family taken at G Wynspeare's Herbet's Studio in Lancaster. My Nan is the lady with the curly hair. |
1927 | ||
My Grandma's brother, Sidney Davis, wife Maud and their daughter. |
C1928 | ||
Reginald Augustine Slade born 1906 Bristol. He was later ordained as a priest and this photo was taken sometime during during a break in his training. Looks like he was in his mid 20's? |
1929 | ||
1929 | ||
My Grandfather's sister Mary Frances Atwell, nee Slade, and husband John. |
c1930 | ||
My great great grandad John Gregory |
1931 - 1940
1930s | ||
Early 1930s | ||
1932 | ||
This Picture was taken in Ireland in 1932. |
1935 | ||
. |
1936 | ||
This Picture was taken at Dublin Zoo. |
1938 | ||
Mum's eldest sister Dinah and her daughter taken in 1938 in Dublin Ireland |
1940 | ||
1941 - 1950
1941 | ||
1943 | ||
Winifred, at the Palace Drawbridge, Wells, Somerset. |
1943 | ||
Parents of Winifred, pictured above, at the Palace Drawbridge in Wells, Somerset |
1944 | ||
1946 | ||
Although the photo was taken in England, the man's clothing was bought in his native Canada. |
1947 | ||
Newly married, he stands outside the marital home, a former Canadian wartime temporary barrack in Sussex. His pullover was knitted by his wife. |
1948 | ||
1950 | ||
This is a photo of my father and his mother on Whit Sunday 1950, returning home from a stroll along Eastbourne seafront. |
1950 | ||
My Grandma and one of her daughters, Vera taken about 1950. |
1951 - 1960
My mum Anne Gleaves on the left with Dad's sister Muriel Gleaves |
1951 | ||
1954 | ||
1956 | ||
1956 | ||
My late grandmother Phyllys Pigott at my mother's wedding. She was 5' 10" in stocking feet and in this photo has at least 2" heels on! |
1957 | ||
This was taken on my grandmother's first visit to England since she emigrated to Canada in 1911. Note the hat - even on a trip to Chessington Zoo! |
1957 | ||