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The Corset
and the Crinoline: An
Illustrated History, by W. B. Lord. 6x9", softbound book, 240 pages. This
profusely illustrated fashion history surveys the fascinating range of
undergarments that whittled the female waist to its most slender proportions.
Discover how the use of wood, whalebone, steel, hoops, and tight laces had a
gripping influence on shaping the figures of women from ancient Greece to
19th-century Vienna. ADD865-$13.00
Ancient European Costume
and Fashion, by Herbert Norris. 336 pages, 6x9”, softbound
book. Scrupulously researched book by noted authority traces
the development of European clothing styles from prehistory
to the Norman Conquest in A.D. 1066. Over 160 illustrations,
including 17 full-color plates, display draped robes of
classical Greece, the jewel-encrusted apparel of a
10th-century Byzantine emperor, garments of peasants, as
well as footwear, hairstyles, headdresses, and jewelry.
ADD2129-$17.00
See Also
American
A Dictionary of
Costume and
Fashion: Historic and Modern, by Mary Brooks Picken, 1998. 6x9”, softbound book,
446 pages. Fascinating, fact-filled compendium defines over 10,000 words
associated with wearing apparel and fashion. From bateau necklines to trilbys
and vamps, individual terms are assembled alphabetically in groups according to
dress parts, fabrics, and other style categories. Enhanced with over 750 clearly
detailed illustrations, this comprehensive guide will be welcomed by writers,
designers, and historians.
ADD2218-$22.00
Historic
Costumes and How to Make Them,
by Fernald and Shenton. 5x8", 128 pages, softbound book. This practical
and informative guidebook is a "must-have" for anyone planning to create
accurate period costumes for theatrical productions and historical reenactments.
From short tunics worn by Saxon men in the fifth century to a lady's bustle
dress of the late 1800s, this profusely illustrated text contains a wealth of
authentic patterns and information. 81 illustrations.
ADD899-$9.00
An Illustrated Dictionary of
Historic
Costume, by James R. Planche, 2003. 8.5x11”, softbound book, 592 pages.
This quick and ready reference thoroughly defines thousands of words associated
with wearing apparel and spans nearly 2,000 years of fashion history. From
abacot, hacketon, helm, jipocoat, and jump, to xainture, ysgyn, zatayn, and
zibelline, this unique and comprehensive book is profusely illustrated with over
1,300 detailed line drawings of subjects. Unabridged republication of A
Cyclopaedia of Costume or Dictionary of Dress, originally published by Chatto
and Windus, London, 1876. ADD2219-$35.00
Historic English
Costumes
and How to Make
Them, by Talbot Hughes, 2009.
approx.5x8",
432 pages, softbound book. From the grass-cloth wraps of prehistoric times to
the luxurious gowns of the Victorian era, this well-researched guide traces the
evolution of English fashion for men and women through hundreds of photos and
illustrations. More than a history of British style, it's also a dressmaker's
delight, filled with scaled-down patterns for 67 authentic costumes.
ADD898-$15.00
Tudor Costume
and Fashion, by Herbert Norris,
1997. 920 pages, 6x9”, softbound book.
Monumental,
profusely illustrated study of English fashions from
1485–1603. Highly authentic, detailed survey exuberantly
describes clothing, headgear, hairstyles, jewelry, collars,
footwear, more worn by royalty, nobility, middle and lower
classes. Most illustrations from contemporary sources. 1,000
black-and-white figures. 24 halftones. 22 color plates.
ADD2125-$35.00
Women's
Costume
of the
Ancient World: 700 Full-Color Illustrations, by Paul Louis
de Giafferri. 64 pages, 8.5x11”, softbound book. One of the
most extensive pictorial collections of its kind, this
volume of 700 full-color illustrations provides an authentic
and fascinating glimpse of what fashionable women were
wearing more than 2,000 years ago. Like many of today's
young ladies, fashionably dressed women of ancient Egypt
favored pointed sandals and dresses of transparent
materials. Off-the-shoulder gowns were popular, as was
costume jewelry. Assyrian females liked fringed accents on
their tunics and gowns, while Greek and Roman ladies of
fashion were partial to loose robes that frequently revealed
upper and lower limbs. Head coverings from helmets and
shawls to wide-brimmed hats were de rigueur.
Organized according to region--Egyptian, Assyrian, Greek,
Roman, and Greco-Roman--the finely detailed drawings are
accompanied by brief identifying captions. A valuable
reference for costume historians and designers, this
extensive pictorial collection will delight fashion
enthusiasts as well. Republication of the New York, 1926-27
edition.
ADD2130-$15.00
See Also
Fashion
Accessories of
Dress: An Illustrated
Encyclopedia, Katherine Lester and Bess Viola Oerke, 2004.
608 pages, 6x9”, softbound book. hats, veils, wigs, and
cosmetics to cravats, shawls, shoes, and gloves, this useful
reference provides an entertaining account of the forms of
personal adornment men and women have used throughout the
ages to enhance their wearing apparel. Incorporates
illustrations from rare books and magazines, photographs,
and observations. 644 figures and 59 plates. Unabridged
republication of Accessories of Dress: An Illustrated
History of the Frills and Furbelows of Fashion,
published by The Manual Arts Press, Peoria, Illinois, 1940.
ADD2133-$39.00
Everyday
Dress
of Rural America, 1783-1800: With Instructions and Patterns,
by Merideth Wright, 1992. 128 pages, 8.5x11", softbound book.
Comprehensive study of late-18th-century clothing worn by settlers and Abenaki
Indians of New England. Full descriptions and line drawings with complete
instructions for duplicating a wide range of garments: shifts, petticoats,
gowns, breeches, waistcoats, headgear, more. Four bibliographies. List of
resources. 54 black-and-white illustrations.
ADD2091-$12.00
Full-Color Sourcebook of French
Fashion: 15th
to 19th Centuries, by Pauquet Frères, 2003. 80 pages,
8.5x11”, softbound book. 500 years of French fashion are
reproduced directly from a rare and valuable 19th-century
publication. Artfully rendered illustrations progress
chronologically from the voluminous robes of 15th-century
royalty to the Empire styles of the Napoleonic era. Members
of the nobility are well represented, as are dapper pages,
knights, chambermaids, milkmaids, and shepherdesses. 76
full-color plates. Dover Original selection of plates from
Modes et Costumes Historiques published by René
Pincebourde, Paris [n.d.]. ADD2131-$20.00
Victorian and Edwardian
Fashions from "La
Mode Illustrée", by JoAnne Olian, 1997. 256 pages, 9x12”,
softbound book. Over 1,000 illustrations, meticulously
reproduced from rare issues of renowned fashion magazine,
present a striking array of women’s fashions from 1860 to
1914: elegant evening and dinner gowns, stylish daywear,
wedding ensembles, bathing costumes, mourning clothes,
cycling outfits and much more; plus detailed renderings of
shoes, hats, parasols, and other accessories. ADD2132-$20.00
The Mode in
Furs: A Historical Survey with 680
Illustrations, by R. Turner Wilcox, 2010. Softbound book, 6x9”, 172 pages. From
prehistoric garments to modern high-fashion designs, this unique survey traces
the history of furs and fur accessories. R. Turner Wilcox, a former fashion
editor for Women's Wear Daily, begins with practical uses of reindeer hides and
bearskins for warmth during the Stone Age. Advancing to the ancient
civilizations of Egypt, Persia, Greece, and Rome, she defines fur's role as a
status symbol during the Renaissance and its eventual adoption by wearers
outside the aristocracy. The 680 drawings that illustrate this volume depict
furs of all times and places: panther skins of Egyptian high priests, ermine
mantles of French queens, sealskin trousers of Alaskan Eskimos, and raccoon
coats of American college students. Chronological entries include introductions
for each era, and a helpful glossary of furs features images of their animal
sources. Professional designers and costumers as well as amateurs with an
interest in furs will find this volume a valuable reference. Reprint of the
Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, 1951 edition. ADD2237-$17.00
Women's
Hats, Headdresses
and Hairstyles: With 453 Illustrations, Medieval to Modern,
by, Georgine de Courtais, 2006. 192 pages, 8.5x11”,
softbound book. This informative and meticulously researched
book provides an authentic record of more than 1,300 years
of changing fashions in women's hairstyles and headwear in
England. More than 400 of the author's own
drawings--rendered from ancient sources--trace these
evolving fashions. Finely detailed images depict turbans;
horned, heart-shaped, and butterfly headdresses preferred by
fifteenth-century English ladies; seventeenth-century hoods
and veils; elaborate hats and hairstyles of the Georgian
period; early Victorian-era bonnets; net and lace caps and
small hats of the late nineteenth century; and the
emancipated look in both hairstyles and hat styles of the
early twentieth century.
ADD2127-$15.00
Medieval Costume and Fashion, by Herbert Norris, 1999, Orig. Costume and
Fashion: Senlac to Bosworth/1927. Approx.
6¼x9¼", softbound book, 528 pages, illustrations. AD926-$18.00
Medieval
Costume
and How to Recreate It, by Dorothy Hartley, 2004, Orig. Medieval Costume and
Life/1931. Approx.
6½x9¼", softbound book, 142 pages, illustrations, indexed.
AD913-$12.00 Currently IN
STOCK
 59
Authentic Turn-of-the-Century Fashion
Patterns,
by Kristina Harris, 1995. Softbound, 9x12”, 144 pages. Over 575 illustrations
detailing 59 different garments, mainly for women. Introduction and brief
instructions.
ADD2281-$15.00
Fashion in
Underwear: from Babylon to Bikini Briefs,
by Elizabeth Ewing, 2010.
160 pages,
8.5x11", softbound book.
This revealing and profusely illustrated book documents the design and
manufacture of intimate apparel from the ancient world through the 20th century.
It traces the development of hoops, petticoats, corsets, brassieres, and other
garments, examining the ways in which these items reflect social influences such
as sexuality and women's emancipation. Reprint of the edition published by B. T.
Batsford, Ltd., London, 1971. ADD2090-$13.00
Authentic Victorian
Fashion Patterns: A Complete Lady’s Wardrobe, by Kristina Harris.
9x12", 144 pages, softbound book.
Rich selection of scaled dressmaker's patterns from the popular late
19th-century magazine The Voice of Fashion details fifty garments for
women, from handsome daytime and evening dresses to casual tennis outfits, a
riding habit, and undergarments. Of practical use for costume designers and
students of fashion; will also delight browsers. 498 illustrations.
ADD900-$13.00
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