Skirting Tradition

Skirting Tradition

This is set in 1895 Texas — wait, what?

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Lydia
Lydia
7 years ago

It looks like a Halloween costume for an 18th century character. A hundred years before 1890. I know this because I once made one for a friend of mine, except the underskirt was royal blue and black taffeta, and the overskirt was shiny black vinyl. It was much better made than this one, too. It had a separate under and overskirt and fit my friend like a glove. This one came out of a plastic package at a pop up Halloween store. Feh.

Cathy Adams
Cathy Adams
7 years ago

Not the right decade for this dress. And did any woman have nails like that in 1895?

Grackle
Grackle
7 years ago
Reply to  Cathy Adams

Short answer: no, probably not. Apparently in the 19th c:

“Fingernail maintenance was originally thought of as a medical and hygienic industry. Short, round nails were easily kept clean and symbolized a wealthy life of leisure.” (http://mashable.com/2016/01/14/fingernail-history)

Apologies for slight derail but I always think this sort of thing is interesting.

Lydia D
Lydia D
7 years ago

Shame. Aside from the slight difficult readability of the word “hearts,” it would’ve been a fine cover for a different time period.

Naaman Brown
Naaman Brown
7 years ago

Faceless models in clothing ads, maybe.
Faceless characters on book covers, no.
Why dey do dat? Why?