Hi Dede,

I don't know if it helps at all, but I have a couple of very old
family garments that have notes with them calling them sacques.  They
date across a certain spectrum: one to the 1890s, the others to a
scattering of years between 1910 and the early 1980s (the last being
one I preserved from when my son was born).  They are are either
drawstring-hemmed baby nighties, longer than most babies would be tall
and still be able to fit the arms, chest and shoulders, or they are
what were called "kimonos" when I was a baby in the 1950s: a
open-front garment with ties, that was usually put on a baby over
diapers and plastic pants after a bath, to keep back and arms warm.
My mother, who was born in Germany in 1933, routinely referred to any
sort of baby garment along those lines as a sacque.

I've not seen them (outside of Revy War period short gown-types of
things) for adults, but can see where they would be very useful in the
situations which your helpful lady described.  I don't know if that
helps any with the mystery... but for whatever it might be worth, the
family sacques I have in baby size are pretty much cut the exact same
way she describes those adult garments, except for the "drawstring
bag-up-the-baby" thing that was probably worn by my grandmother when
she was a baby....

Cheers,
Meli

----------------------
Back at the Reed Homestead... we are moving on to the next pile --
stacks and stacks of shirt-like garments with no closures (other than
a few with ties at the neck).

We hired a woman in 1995 to start pulling clothing literally out of
garbage bags and start cataloging. (Sadly, we still have pieces from
1809 still in garbage bags -- yes, the black plastic kind.)? She
called these shirt-like garments "sacques" and this is want she wrote
about them...

"...I would like someone after me to write the word "sacque" which is
what we're going to use for the generic term.? A sacque is a garment
which hangs from the shoulder down without interruption, without
darts, without a waist seam, so a man's sacque coat is one that was
not cut in at the waist.? And that seems to be a generic form for this
style if garment, no matter how it's being used, but as I said before
and you got on the VCR I think, these can be used as a working garment
with a skirt, held in place with an apron.? They can be used as a
short nightgown for hot weather and when somebody is ill and is using
a bedpan.? They can be used over your dress when you're doing your
hair and that's probably about it.? Oh, yes, and the other thing is
for maternity, when it's an expandable top for when you're pregnant
and obviously can be used for nursing as well.? And nobody has as many
as you have."

We have attempted to locate information about this type of garment,
but clearly we're looking in the wrong places because we're coming up
empty. We can find "saques" certainly but they don't look like ours.

Any ideas?

Dede O'Hair
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