1890s in Western fashion

{{short description|Costume and fashion of the 1890s}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2023}}

File:Mr. and Mrs. I. N. Phelps Stokes MET DT1225.jpg in the easy, tailored outdoor fashions of 1897]]

Fashion in the 1890s in Western countries is characterized by long elegant lines, tall collars, and the rise of sportswear. It was an era of great dress reforms led by the invention of the drop-frame safety bicycle, which allowed women the opportunity to ride bicycles more comfortably, and therefore, created the need for appropriate clothing.{{cite book |last1=Cunningham |first1=Patricia |title=Dress and Popular Culture |url=https://archive.org/details/dresspopularcult00essa |url-access=registration |year=1991 |publisher=Bowling Green State University Popular Press |location=Bowling Green, OH |author2=Sally Sims |chapter=The Bicycle, the Bloomer, and Dress Reform in the 1890s|isbn=978-0-87972-507-5 }}

Another great influence on women's fashions of this era, particularly among those considered part of the Aesthetic Movement in America, was the political and cultural climate. Because women were taking a more active role in their communities, in the political world, and in society as a whole, their dress reflected this change. The more freedom to experience life outside the home that women of the Gilded Age acquired, the more freedom of movement was experienced in fashions as well. As the emphasis on athleticism influenced a change in garments which allowed for freedom of movement, the emphasis on less rigid gender roles influenced a change in dress which allowed for more self-expression, and a more natural silhouette of women's bodies were revealed.

The 1890s brought the beginnings of a change in how fashion was presented as well. While illustrations still dominated fashion magazines, printed fashion photographs first appeared in French magazine La Mode Pratique in 1892, where they would continue be a weekly feature.{{cite book |last1=Croll |first1=Jennifer |title=Fashion that Changed the World |date=2014 |publisher=Prestel Verlag |location=Munich |isbn=978-3791347899 |pages=39, 46 |url=https://archive.org/details/fashionthatchang0000crol/page/38/mode/2up |access-date=11 November 2022}}

Women's fashions

File:René Schützenberger - La Femme en blanc.jpg, 1895.]]

Fashionable women's clothing styles shed some of the extravagances of previous decades (so that skirts were neither crinolined as in the 1850s, nor protrudingly bustled in back as in the late 1860s and mid-1880s, nor tight as in the late 1870s), but corseting continued unmitigated, or even slightly increased in severity. Early 1890s dresses consisted of a tight bodice with the skirt gathered at the waist and falling more naturally over the hips and undergarments than in previous years. Puffy leg-of-mutton sleeves (also known as gigot sleeves) made a comeback, growing bigger each year until reaching their largest size around 1895.{{cite book |author1=Kyoto Costume Institute |title=Fashion: A History from the 18th to the 20th Century |date=2002 |publisher=Taschen |isbn=3822812064 |page=299}}

During the mid-1890s, skirts took on an A-line silhouette that was almost bell-like. The late 1890s returned to tighter sleeves often with small puffs or ruffles capping the shoulder but fitted to the wrist. Skirts took on a trumpet shape, fitting more closely over the hip and flaring just above the knee. Corsets in the 1890s helped define the hourglass figure as immortalized by artist Charles Dana Gibson. In the very late 1890s, the corset elongated, giving the women a slight S-bend silhouette that would be popular well into the Edwardian era.

=Sportswear and tailored fashions=

Image:Little dress Charvet.jpg and chemisette.]]

Changing attitudes about acceptable activities for women also made sportswear popular for women, with such notable examples as the bicycling dress and the tennis dress.

Unfussy, tailored clothes, adapted from the earlier theme of men's tailoring and simplicity of form, were worn for outdoor activities and traveling.{{cite journal |last=Hollander |first=Anne |title=The Modernization of Fashion |journal=Design Quarterly |year=1992 |number=154 |pages=27–33 |doi=10.2307/4091263 |jstor=4091263}} The shirtwaist, a costume with a bodice or waist tailored like a man's shirt with a high collar, was adopted for informal daywear and became the uniform of working women. Walking suits featured ankle-length skirts with matching jackets. The notion of "rational dress" for women's health was a widely discussed topic in 1891, which led to the development of sports dress. This included ample skirts with a belted blouse for hockey. In addition, cycling became very popular and led to the development of "cycling costumes", which were shorter skirts or "bloomers" which were Turkish trouser style outfits. By the 1890s, women bicyclists increasingly wore bloomers in public and in the company of men as well as other women. Bloomers seem to have been more commonly worn in Paris than in England or the United States and became quite popular and fashionable. In the United States, bloomers were more intended for exercise than fashion. The rise of American women's college sports in the 1890s created a need for more unencumbered movement than exercise skirts would allow. By the end of the decade, most colleges that admitted women had women's basketball teams, all outfitted in bloomers.Warner, 2006, p. 204 Across the nation's campuses, baggy bloomers were paired with blouses to create the first women's gym uniforms.Warner, 2006, p. 206

The rainy daisy was a style of walking or sports skirt introduced during this decade, allegedly named after Daisy Miller,{{cite book |last1=Olson |first1=Sidney |title=Young Henry Ford : a picture history of the first forty years |date=1997 |publisher=Wayne State University Press |location=Detroit |isbn=9780814312247 |page=[https://archive.org/details/younghenryfordpi00olso/page/84 84] |url=https://archive.org/details/younghenryfordpi00olso |url-access=registration}} but also named for its practicality in wet weather, as the shorter hemlines did not soak up puddles of water.{{cite book |last1=Hill |first1=Daniel Delis |title=As seen in Vogue : a century of American fashion in advertising |date=2007 |publisher=Texas Tech University Press |location=Lubbock, Tex. |isbn=9780896726161 |pages=23–25 |edition=1. pbk. print. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=MvilOZhaRkAC&pg=PR35}} They were particularly useful for cycling, walking or sporting pursuits as the shorter hems were less likely to catch in the bicycle mechanisms or underfoot, and enabled freer movement.

Swimwear was also developed, usually made of navy blue wool with a long tunic over full knickers.

Day dresses typical of the time period had high necks, wasp waists, puffed sleeves and bell-shaped skirts. Gowns had a squared decolletage, a wasp-waist cut and skirts with long trains.

=Influence of aesthetic dress=

The 1890s in both Europe and North America saw growing acceptance of artistic or aesthetic dress as mainstream fashion influenced by the philosophies of John Ruskin and William Morris.{{cite journal |last=Blanchard |first=Mary W. |title=Boundaries and the Victorian Body: Aesthetic Fashion in Gilded Age America |journal=The American History Review |date=February 1995 |volume=100 |series=1 |issue=1 |page=22 |doi=10.2307/2167982 |jstor=2167982}} This was especially seen in the adoption of the uncorseted tea gown for at-home wear. In the United States during this period, Dress, the Jenness Miller Magazine (1887–1898) [https://web.archive.org/web/20051219191400/http://costume.osu.edu/Reforming_Fashion/artistic_dress.htm], reported that tea gowns were being worn outside the home for the first time in fashionable summer resorts.

Before women acquired a more prominent role outside the home, a more traditionally Victorian, restrained, and modest style of dress dominated. However, during the 1870s and 80s, the Aesthetic Movement led to a shift in behavior, with some women using fashion as a method of defying traditional domesticity and claiming agency.

=Hairstyles and headgear=

Hairstyles at the start of the decade were simply a carry-over from the 1880s styles that included curled or frizzled bangs over the forehead as well as hair swept to the top of the head, but after 1892, hairstyles became increasingly influenced by the Gibson Girl. By the mid-1890s, hair had become looser and wavier and bangs gradually faded from high fashion. By the end of the decade, hair was often worn in a large mass with a bun at the top of the head, a style that would be predominant during the first decade of the 20th century.

=Shoes=

High tab front shoes with a large buckle had made a comeback in the 1870s and were again revived in the 1890s. This popular style of shoe had a few names such as "Cromwell," "Colonial," and "Molière".{{cite web |title=Evening Pumps |url=http://www.metmuseum.org/Collections/search-the-collections/156734 |publisher=The Metropolitan Museum of Art}} At this time materials such as suede, leather, lace and metal were used to fashion the shoe and decorate it. Suede was new to the market in 1890 and was available in a few pale shades.

=Athletic wear=

The shift toward functional fashion also affected women's athletic wear. Women in Paris began wearing bloomers when bicycling as early as 1893, while in England lower bicycle frames accommodated the dresses that women continued to wear for bicycling. Long floor length dresses gradually gave way to shorter hemlines and a more casual style of athletic clothing. Similarly, bathing suits also became shorter and less covered — yet another example of the beginnings of a shift in dress toward greater freedom and functionality.B. Payne, "Women's Fashions of the Nineteenth Century", History of Costume: From the Ancient Egyptians to the Twentieth Century (1965)

=Cartoons=

Image:Bloomer-Club-cigars-satire-p-adv054.JPG|Cigar box art

Image:Novelty in sleeves (Punch magazine cartoon 1895).jpg|Cartoon mocking sleeve designs suggesting that new styles could be modeled on cricket bats, hot air balloons, or tennis rackets.

Image:Ellimans-Universal-Embrocation-Slough-1897-Ad.png| 1897 advertisement showing woman with unskirted garments for bicycle riding

Men's fashion

Image:Pearce Bartlett.jpg by Pearce, 1890]]

The overall silhouette of the 1890s was long, lean, and athletic. Hair was generally worn short, often with a pointed beard and generous moustache.

=Coats, jackets, and trousers=

By the 1890s, the sack coat (UK lounge coat) was fast replacing the frock coat for most informal and semi-formal occasions. Three-piece suits ("ditto suits") consisting of a sack coat with matching waistcoat (U.S. vest) and trousers were worn, as were matching coat and waistcoat with contrasting trousers. Contrasting waistcoats were popular, and could be made with or without collars and lapels. The usual style was single-breasted.

The blazer, a navy blue or brightly colored or striped flannel coat cut like a sack coat with patch pockets and brass buttons, was worn for sports, sailing, and other casual activities.

The Norfolk jacket remained fashionable for shooting and rugged outdoor pursuits. It was made of sturdy tweed or similar fabric and featured paired box pleats over the chest and back, with a fabric belt. Worn with matching breeches (or U.S. knickerbockers), it became the Norfolk suit, suitable for bicycling or golf with knee-length stockings and low shoes, or for hunting with sturdy boots or shoes with leather gaiters.

The cutaway morning coat was still worn for formal day occasions in Europe and major cities elsewhere.

The most formal evening wear remained a dark tail coat and trousers with a dark or light waistcoat. Evening wear was worn with a white bow tie and a shirt with a winged collar.

The less formal dinner jacket or tuxedo, which featured a shawl collar with silk or satin facings, now generally had a single button. Dinner jackets were appropriate formal wear when "dressing for dinner" at home or at a men's club. The dinner jacket was worn with a white shirt and a dark tie.

Knee-length topcoats, often with contrasting velvet or fur collars, and calf-length overcoats were worn in winter.

=Shirts and neckties=

Shirt collars were turned over or pressed into "wings", and became taller through the decade. Dress shirts had stiff fronts, sometimes decorated with shirt studs and buttoned up the back. Striped shirts were popular for informal occasions.

The usual necktie was a four-in-hand or an Ascot tie, made up as a neckband with wide wings attached and worn with a stickpin, but the 1890s also saw the return of the bow tie (in various proportions) for day dress.

=Accessories=

As earlier in the century, top hats remained a requirement for upper class formal wear; bowlers and soft felt hats in a variety of shapes were worn for more casual occasions, and flat straw boaters were worn for yachting and at the seashore.

Children's fashion

File:Klas_van_Aagje_en_Jacob_Olie_Jacob_Olie_(max_res).jpg|Group of children, 1890

File:Dora by Kate Perugini.jpg|Girl with jump rope, 1892

Image:Chase William Merritt Ring Toss 1896.jpg|Girls, 1896

Image:TheLadiessWorldNovember1897page15.gif|Girls' fashions, 1897

Image:P S Krøyer 1897 - Døtrene Benzon.jpg|Girls, 1897

Image:Young girl I.jpg|A girl with a doll, 1898

File:Sigrid Juselius.jpg|Sigrid Juselius, 1898

Working clothes

File:XIT cowboys.jpg|Cowboys in Texas, 1891

File:Vallotton Die Kranke 1892 detail.png|Maid, 1892

Image:PUK1894p341.jpg|Townswoman and fisherwoman, 1894

Image:PUK1894page380rector_poor.jpg|Rector and drinker, 1894

Notes

  1. [https://web.archive.org/web/20130515132211/http://costume.osu.edu/exhibitions/reformingfashion/ Reforming Fashion 1850-1914]

See also

References

{{Reflist}}

  • Arnold, Janet: Patterns of Fashion 2: Englishwomen's Dresses and Their Construction C.1860–1940, Wace 1966, Macmillan 1972. Revised metric edition, Drama Books 1977. {{ISBN|0-89676-027-8}}
  • Ashelford, Jane: The Art of Dress: Clothing and Society 1500–1914, Abrams, 1996. {{ISBN|0-8109-6317-5}}
  • Blanchard, Mary. "The American History Review: Boundaries and the Victorian Body: Aesthetic Fashion in Gilded Age America," Oxford University Press, 1995. Vol. 100, No. 1, pp. 21–50
  • Nunn, Joan: Fashion in Costume, 1200–2000, 2nd edition, A & C Black (Publishers) Ltd; Chicago: New Amsterdam Books, 2000. (Excerpts online at [http://www.victorianweb.org The Victorian Web])
  • Payne, Blanche: History of Costume from the Ancient Egyptians to the 20th century, Harper & Row, 1965. No ISBN for this edition; ASIN B0006BMNFS
  • Norris, Herbert, and Oswald Curtis. 19th Century Costume and Fashion, Mineola, New York: Dover Publications, INC., 1998. 227–229.
  • Steele, Valerie: Paris Fashion: A Cultural History, Second Edition. New York: Berg, 1998. 175–176.
  • Warner, Patricia. "When the girls came out to play: The birth of American sportswear" Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 2006. {{ISBN|1558495495}}, {{ISBN|1558495487}}