Here's a question for those (like me) old-timers out there. I may be
going to a 1960s hippies style event and if so, need to wear a
costume. My recollection isn't so good. Remember what they said:
If you can remember it, you weren't really there?Anyhow, I'm
trying to remember when
Kimiko, I'm very very sorry that you perceived my response as being
jumped on, it certainly, absolutely wasn't meant personally. I
apologize for my clumsy writing. Yours just happened to be the post
that brought the subject up again, so it's the one I responded to...
I probably should have
Vogue Patterns offered the Rudi Gernrich dress in 1968. This was the high
waisted dress, either mini or full-length. was an ikon in S.F. as I
remember. It had the square neck, elastic under the bust, across the square
neck and from bust to back at the sleeve. Sleeve was long and flowing. That
I remember that dress - that was THE dress where I grew up. Either so
short your personality showed, or so long it dragged on the ground if you
weren't careful... Some girls wore the mini or a knee-length version over
bellbottoms. Wow, man, flashbacks.
Liadain
Mercy I'm
I guess my husband and I are just stuffy, but we do get tired of people (in
general, not you specifically) trying to justify all sorts of modern things
as having period antecedents, so why not use the modern thing. This
Pillbox terminology thing just pushed all our buttons in that area, I
So I'll go away and lurk again, because I can't seem to talk
tactfully enough not to cause upsets, no matter how hard I try. It's
always happening, has done forever, it's me and not anyone else.
chimene
I think it's called email - We are such visual folks, if we can't see the face
body
Wow, man, flashbacks.
Liadain
Mercy I'm ollld
No, no, no... so col.
___
h-costume mailing list
h-costume@mail.indra.com
Oh, fess up; how many of you thought you'd live to see 2000, much less 2010?
And where's my flying car; gosh darn it!?!?
-Original Message-
From: h-costume-boun...@indra.com [mailto:h-costume-boun...@indra.com] On
Behalf Of Rickard, Patty
Sent: Saturday, July 04, 2009 6:33 AM
To:
Hi, CGW Director-at-Large, here. I can't actually guarantee a ticket to the
Gala. I can tell you there are ALWAYS tickets for sale at the event. The
message board at Info/Registration will have them.
As for the Limited classes, registration was classed a while back, but there
are dozens of
Oh gawd!! I still have the patterns I used back then! I even have 2 of my
favorite bell bottoms!! Who would have thought that the clothes I wore
everyday would become an historical costume, for pete's sake!!
Anne
On Sat, Jul 4, 2009 at 12:06 AM, Sylvia Rognstad syl...@ntw.net wrote:
Here's
I am thinking of branching out into early US Civil War, and I was told that
'the easist thing to make is the Garibaldi shirt'.
However there were no examples around for anyone to show me. And no reference
book/website for them to point me to.
Can you please share a pic / web site / pattern
Ah, what fun. I know by the early 70s I had several long dresses for
casual wear, but when did the trend start? Well, here are two factoids
that might help:
In the late 60s Laura Ashley introduced daywear that had a longer
length. (see any history of Laura Ashley, wikipedia will do)
And my
Google on Garibaldi, then on garibaldi shirt. There are commercial
patterns.
On Sat, Jul 4, 2009 at 9:37 AM, purpl...@optonline.net wrote:
I am thinking of branching out into early US Civil War, and I was told that
'the easist thing to make is the Garibaldi shirt'.
However there were no
I remember my older brother's Cool Girlfriend wearing long dresses
when I was in 8th grade, in 1971. By the time I was in high school,
a year later, the pattern companies were showing most of their teen
oriented dresses in both mini and long lengths. And then there were
the long skirts
Umm.. isn't that what historical costume is? Naturally you don't really
expect it to happen in your life time, but the rate of change for Fashion
does seem to be increasing...
-Original Message-
From: h-costume-boun...@indra.com [mailto:h-costume-boun...@indra.com] On
Behalf Of Anne
On Jul 4, 2009, at 12:06 AM, Sylvia Rognstad wrote:
Here's a question for those (like me) old-timers out there. I may
be going to a 1960s hippies style event and if so, need to wear a
costume. My recollection isn't so good. Remember what they said:
If you can remember it, you weren't
Heh. Thanks, at least my grandkids think so! ;-)
Of course nowadays you can't walk through any clothing store without
seeing something on the racks that I already wore 40!!! years ago, so
Granny's wardrobe is pretty kewl.
Liadain
THL Liadain ni Mhordha OFO
You get a wonderful view from
Sometimes what someone tells us is not the best information. :-)
The 'classic' women's Garibaldi shirt c.1860-1865 was made from lightweight
red wool flannel embroidered in black in scroll patterns. It is cut very
full and gathered into a waistband (worn over the waistband of the skirt),
with
This is not directly an answer to your question, but it is the sort of thing I
would appreciate hearing about before I made something - take it or leave it as
you choose.
I am not a Civil War reenactor, so I do not know how to evaluate this source,
but I have a special edition of The Citizen's
The article in the August 2006 edition of The Citizen's Companion is a
reprint of an article Karen Crocker originally researched over a dozen years
ago. Karen will readily agree continuing research indicates there are
portions of that article that are not quite correct.
Karen's comments
Given Barbara Michaels' interest in vintage clothing and textiles?(Shattered
Silk), I think she'd get a kick out of knowing that one of her books was cited
on this list!
Nancy
Message: 6
Date: Sat, 04 Jul 2009 12:44:14 -0400
From: Hope Greenberg hope.greenb...@uvm.edu
Subject: Re: [h-cost]
I remember that we were not allowed to wear long skirts to high school in
the year 1968-69. A friend of mine wore one and was called into the
Principal's office and told, Do not wear that skirt to school again. The
next day she wore another long skirt to school. Again she was called into
the
I went to high school before the hippie craze hit, so no one even
thought of wearing either long skirts or pants. Girls were still
trying to dress like the perfect little woman with girdles, heels and
stockings, although we only went that far for special occasions, not
to school, but you
In a message dated 7/4/2009 1:29:41 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
be...@softwareinnovation.com writes:
but the rate of change for Fashion
does seem to be increasing...
Y'know, it seems that way, but it's not. Little things change pretty
regularly. When you start studying
In a message dated 7/4/2009 5:41:56 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
sha...@collierfam.com writes:
I remember that we were not allowed to wear long skirts to high school in
the year 1968-69.
**
Isn't that dumb? They were probably telling girls not to wear short skirts
3 years
I had asked Lynn McMasters and she says that it is based off an Italian
portrait.
http://lynnmcmasters.com/LadyM.html
in color and a wee bit larger.
http://tinyurl.com/yt6hg9
Now it could be something like this
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Angelo_Bronzino_002.jpg
with a caul but it is
I lived in Ann Arbor, Michigan, from 1963 to 1976. As I remember it,
skirts got progressively shorter from 1966 to 1969 but the local
culture still didn't accept trousers on women. IIRC, the first
pantsuits for women were greeted with derision on this side of the
Atlantic. Anyhoo, I
In a message dated 7/4/2009 7:37:43 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
sovag...@cybermesa.com writes:
[who thinks it is true that the Sixties mostly happened in the
Seventies]
Oh, absolutely.
Ann Wass
**Make your summer sizzle with fast and easy recipes for the
grill.
What do you mean by that? I definitely experienced the 60s in the 60s.
Sylvia
On Jul 4, 2009, at 6:22 PM, annbw...@aol.com wrote:
In a message dated 7/4/2009 7:37:43 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
sovag...@cybermesa.com writes:
[who thinks it is true that the Sixties mostly happened in the
Oh, many styles and events that people remember as 1960s are actually
1970s. I think the most memorable event may be the National Guard/Kent State
incident, which was actually in the spring of 1970. Right off the top of my
head, clothing-wise, I'm thinking of polyester double knits, and
I figure that what we think of as The Sixties started about 1964 (when the
Beatles arrived) and went to about 1976 or so. It all depends on what your
markers are, but mere calendar dates don't work. Trends and whatever don't
start and stop neatly just because the decade changes.
Maggie Secara
As I am brand new to this time period, do I just google Civil War dress, or
1860, or what?
Katheryne
- Original Message -
From: Carolann Schmitt
Karen's suggest on getting an appropriate one-piece dress and
accessorizingit for your needs is still very applicable and very
good
On Sat, Jul 4, 2009 at 12:06 AM, Sylvia Rognstad syl...@ntw.net wrote:
Here's a question for those (like me) old-timers out there. I may be going
to a 1960s hippies style event and if so, need to wear a costume. My
recollection isn't so good. Remember what they said: If you can remember
it,
Also, they were considered undergarments, just as men's shirts were were
not worn alone. A Garibaldi waist was worn as an ensemble piece with either
a Zouave or bolero jacket , or a Swiss bodice.
I hadn't heard that, nor guessed it from the fashion plates I have seen with
no jacket.
--
This conversation came to mind tonight while watching fireworks. Many young
adult women were wearing tie-dyed maxi skirts.
Penny Ladnier
Owner, The Costume Gallery Websites
www.costumegallery.com
11 websites of fashion, textiles, costume history
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