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Posts Tagged ‘Pirate Costumes’

5
Mar

The Shoulder Pad: Its Fashion Origins and History

   Posted by: Scribner    in American History, Cultural History, European History, Fashion History, History Blog, History Today, Modern History, Pop Culture History, World History, World War II

Fashion History: Angelo Bronzino. Painting, Portrait of Eleonora de Toledo. 1545What is it about the shoulder pad? Fashion for the recession and for revelry. This year in the fashion circuits of New York, Paris and Milan, the shoulder pad or angular shaping of a garment’s shoulder cut is reappearing as a distinguishing feature. The most recent memory we have of square shoulders, sometimes aggressively jutting outward, is of the mid-1980’s and the era of big-spending after the short recession that ended in 1983. Interestingly, we are entering a period that is somewhat distant from the materialistic, impulse-driven 80’s– so why the return to the hallmark look of the age of expenditure?

The shoulder pad as an accent of form in garments has had several turns in history and has been a characteristic of periods of both economic hardship and economic strength.

Fashion History: Shoulder Pads in the 1940sDuring and after World War II, the fashion for men’s and women’s clothing were restricted for war-time manufacturing reasons as well as a general cultural inclination for stricter lines and less ornament or flounce. Shoulder pads, echoing the clean lines of a military cut, and accentuating a geometry of containment, were markers of a time of economic austerity.

Oppositely, in the Europe of the early 1500’s, Spain was asserting its dominance as a global power as well as a center of fashion and here, too, the widened shoulder made its appearance. Though in this period Spain was an economic force, hardly in the same straits that Depression-era America faced, the widened shoulder frame was also a marker of austerity but less a response to economic hardship and more a reflection of the cultural austerity of the Spanish. Spain was a Catholic country invested with a self-identity of sobriety and correction and the feature of broadened shoulders, that contributed to a look of rigidity and solemnity in the wearer, was a reflection of this. Certainly, sobriety did not mean a lack of luxury in terms of the materials used to make the garments of the nobility but it did mean a stiffness of presentation.

Fashion History: Shoulder Pads in the 1980sThe more contemporary interest in shoulder padding, as seen in the fashion of the 1980’s and again today, can be said to underlie a general need to assert something strongly. The shoulder pad or the general pronouncement of rigid forms in garments are conventions of the times and assert, as in the 1980’s, a general profligacy or, as in 2009, a strength of character and intention despite economic hardship.

*image: Angelo Bronzino. Painting, Portrait of Eleonora de Toledo. 1545
*image: Photograph. 1940’s Lauren Bacall.
*image: 1980’s fashion advertisement.

Visit the History Store for a wide selection of historical gifts and reenactment gear. Our new product lines include: Pirate Clothing and Pirate Costumes: Relive the Pirate age with our new line of Pirate Clothes. Great for Reenactment, film, movies, stage or a costume party. We now also carry Historical Scale Model Kits: Recreate your own historical dioramas with our new scale model kits.
History CDs & History DVDs
Early to Mid-20th Century Vintage Women's Fashions and Clothing Early to Mid-20th Century Vintage Women’s Fashions and Clothing
Vintage Clothing and Fashion Design on DVD Vintage Clothing and Fashion Design on DVD
Mary Read Pirate Blouse Mary Read Pirate Blouse
Campbell Pirate Shirt Campbell Pirate Shirt

Tags: 1940s fashion, 1980's fashion advertisement., 1980s fashion, Angelo Bronzino. Painting, Campbell Pirate Shirt, Early to Mid-20th Century Vintage Women’s Fashions and Clothing, Fashion History, History CDs, History DVDs, Mary Read Pirate Blouse, military fashion, Photograph. 1940's Lauren Bacall., Pirate Clothing, Pirate Costumes, Portrait of Eleonora de Toledo. 1545, second world war fashion, Shoulder Pad Origins, Shoulder Pads 2009, Shoulder Pads History, Spanish fashion 1500s, spanish fashion 16th century, Vintage Clothing and Fashion Design on DVD, world war 2, World War II

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25
Feb

History of Eyeglasses: From Necessity to Fashion

   Posted by: Scribner    in Ancient History, Cultural History, Fashion History, History Blog, History Today, Medieval History, Modern History, Pop Culture History, Technology History, World History

History of Eyeglasses: From Necessity to FashionA brief history of eyeglasses from 1000 C.E. through the Middle Ages and to the Present. At about the turn of the first millenium, a Muslim scientist referred to in Latin as Alhazen, wrote a treatise titled The Book of Optics which became a foundational text in the study of, among several things, optics and experimental physics. He is thought to be the first person to have written about the use of a magnifying tool for improving vision through the convex shaping of glass. The use of glass or crystals to improve clarity of vision existed in various rudimentary forms from earlier points in history but was only documented and described in a more technical manner in the early part of the 11th century.

History of Eyeglasses: From Necessity to FashionBy the end of the 13th century this early evidence of corrective glass called a reading stone (often held at a distance from the eye, for example pressed directly against text to be enlarged) gave way to the first spectacles to be used on the face. These first quartz crystal lenses would be set in frames linked by a bridge to hold on the nose but did not have framing to hold the spectacles to the face so that ribbon or some other make-shift device would be devised to keep them in place.

It was not until the 1700’s that hinged side-bars were attached to the glass frames in order to secure them and it was also towards the end of this century that variations in lens appeared in the form of monocles (a single lens) and lorgnettes (two lenses held up with a handle at the side.) The bifocal, invented by Benjamin Franklin, also emerged in the late 1700’s. By this time, glasses as a necessity as well as a distinguishing mark for the wearer, were indicative of innovation and learning. Typically, glasses were more accessible to the upper classes because of expense but as they became more widely produced they also became more accessible. Nevertheless as features of style, beyond their practical purpose, glasses remain accessories and the variations one can find in eyeglasses and sunglasses today, demonstrate this clearly in the history of fashion.

History Store
The Presentation to Christ Coins The Presentation to Christ Coins
Medieval Shield Dartboard Medieval Shield Dartboard
1779-1780 Authentic Journal De Paris Newspaper 1779-1780 Authentic Journal De Paris Newspaper
Leather Wrapped Brass Telescope Leather Wrapped Brass Telescope
Visit the History Store for a broad selection of historical gifts and reenactment gear. We now offer over 3,700 historically themed products ranging from authentic items, museum quality reproductions and Replica Weapons and Armor from all eras. Our new product lines include: Pirate Clothing and Pirate Costumes: Relive the Pirate age with our new line of Pirate Clothes. Great for Reenactment, film, movies, stage or a costume party. We now also carry Historical Scale Model Kits: Recreate your own historical dioramas with our new scale model kits.

Tags: 1000 C.E., 11th century, 11th century glasses, 13th century glasses, 1700s eyeglasses, 1779-1780 Authentic Journal De Paris Newspaper, Alhazen, Benjamin Franklin, Book of Optics, eyeglasses as fashion, eyeglasses during the middle ages, eyglasses as necessity, Fashion History, glasses in the middle ages, historical scale model kits, history of eyeglasses, history of glasses, History Store, invention of eyeglasses, Leather Wrapped Brass Telescope, Medieval Shield Dartboard, Pirate Clothing, Pirate Costumes, scale model kits, The Presentation to Christ Coins

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28
Jan

Pirate Fashion: The Lure of the Pirate

   Posted by: Scribner    in American History, Colonial History, Fashion History, History Blog, Personalities in History, Pirate History, World History

The Hostage by N. C. Wyeth, 1911, for Treasure Island by Robert Louis StevensonThe infamous pirate that we associate with danger and daring on the high seas is a strong presence in the imagination of children and adults alike. Piracy has existed for as long as seafaring vessels have existed but the glorified history of piracy as we know it reached a peak in the period known as the Golden Age of Piracy, between 1690 and 1730. The pirates preyed on merchant vessels, mostly in the Atlantic and Caribbean, and created an aura about them that instilled fear and trepidation in anyone who came across the iconic Jolly Roger. Piracy was most closely associated with this symbol of entertainment with death; lore about the pirates’ customs as well as costume rose with the prevalence of the Jolly Roger at sea.

Captain Kidd Burying Treasure on Gardiners Island, painting by Howard PylePirates took a firm place in the legends and stories of 17th and 18th century Europe, in novels such as Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island and Lord Byron’s poem, The Corsair. The description of the pirate in literature and legend may not have matched the reality of the hard-bitten and tattered fighter at sea, but became vivid enough to last through the centuries in a picturesque make-over. The pirate we envision is festooned with his flintlock pistol and trusted cutlass at either side and dons a tricorn hat as he ascends his ship’s masthead with telescope in hand to sight the next ship to be looted. The tricorn was a hat with its three sides turned up in a triangle when looked at from above– it was typically made of wool felt and came in basic colors such as brown and black, though sailors and pirates would adorn their hats in any number of ways. The clothing pirates wore was not different from that of their contemporary sailors and would have consisted of canvas doublets and breeches, linen shirts, and stockings– items designed to be somewhat consistent with the requirements of manning a ship.

Pirate Clothing & Pirate Costumes
John Coxon Pirate Shirt John Coxon Pirate Shirt
Captain Easton Pirate Coat Captain Easton Pirate Coat
Leather Tricorn Colonial Pirate Hat Leather Tricorn Colonial Pirate Hat
Captain Cottuy Pirate Pants Brown Captain Cottuy Pirate Pants Brown
The pirate of the Golden Age of Piracy was an outgrowth of the naval and privateering tradition in Europe and so was not so far removed in his appearance from the traditional government-sponsored seaman. The difference between them rested in the cult of fear and intimidation, backed by certain action, that the pirates spread throughout their expeditions in the high seas.
*image–The Hostage by N. C. Wyeth, 1911, for Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson
*image–Captain Kidd Burying Treasure on Gardiners Island, painting by Howard Pyle

Tags: 1690, 1730, 17th century pirates, 18th century pirates, Captain Cottuy Pirate Pants Brown, Captain Easton Pirate Coat, Golden Age of Piracy, John Coxon Pirate Shirt, John Coxon Pirate Shirt White, Jolly Roger, leather tricorn hat, ohn Coxon Pirate Shirt, Pirate Clothing, pirate costume, Pirate Costumes, pirate cutlass, Pirate Fashion, pirate flag, pirate flintlock pistol, pirate hat, pirate store, pirate sword, pirates of the Atlantic, pirates of the caribbean, privateering, Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island

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