Monday, March 11, 2013
Coat
A coat was the uppermost layer of the 18th century man's suit, worn over
waistcoat and breeches. Both the cut and the title of the fashionable
coat saw several evolutions through the course of the century. In the
late 17th and early 18th centuries a coat was a relatively straight
loose garment, with the slight fullness in the knee-length skirts
falling into folds over the backside of the hips. In the 1720s and 1730s
the skirts of the fashionable coat grew in volume and were set into
regular pleats. In the 1730s an alternative to the weighty full skirted
coat was developed. This new fashioned coat, with narrow skirts set in
pleats and other defining features, including a collar, was termed a
Frock. Through the middle decades of the century both the coat and the
frock were worn, coats being for fashionable full dress, frocks for
fashionable undress. By the 1770s the distinctions in purpose and
terminology were becoming blurred. None but the most conservative older
man would be seen in a full-skirted coat. The man had entered into
fashionable full dress, and was by many simply referred to as a custom coat. In
the closing decade of the 18th century and into
Labels:
custom coat,
man suit
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment