Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A Norfolk jacket is a loose, belted, single-breasted tweed jacket with box pleats on the back and front, with a belt or half-belt. It was originally designed as a shooting coat that did not bind when the elbow was raised to fire. Its origin is uncertain but it may have been named after Coke of Norfolk, the Duke of Norfolk, or after the county ...
Members of the Louisiana Five jazz band wear three-piece suits, 1919. Courtesy of Nunez family collection. Photo of The Prince of Wales in a three-piece suit with pleated, cuffed trousers, Homburg hat, 1919. Men's clothing. Visual dictionary illustrations from a Swedish-German dictionary,1919.
The trailing skirts which were very tight showing skin and broad-brimmed hats of mid-decade narrower dresses and hats with deep crowns. Men wear top hats with formal morning dress or bowlers with lounge suits. Fashion in the period 1900–1909 in the Western world continued the severe, long and elegant lines of the late 1890s.
1910s fashion (10 C, 39 P) 1920s fashion ... Devonshire Collection of Period Costume; Dickey (garment) ... Norfolk jacket; O. Omophorion;
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
A few suit makers continued to make waistcoats, but these tended to be cut low and often had only four buttons. The waistline on the suit coat moved down again in the 1980s to a position well below the waist. By 1985-1986, three-piece suits were on the way out and making way for cut double-breasted and two-piece single-breasted suits.
Clothing companies established in 1910 (7 P) Clothing companies established in 1911 (6 P) ... Buster Brown suit; C. Callot Soeurs; Car coat; Cartwheel hat; Chuck ...
Two girls in sailor dresses, c. 1910. Peter Thomson (sometimes spelled Thompson) [3] had tailoring establishments in New York and Philadelphia in around 1900. [4] His original sailor dresses and suits, for both women and children (including young boys), are represented in several American museum collections including the Metropolitan Museum's Costume Institute, [5] and the Philadelphia Museum ...