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1900’s -1919 fashion 

1900’s -1919 fashion . By: Abby Evans and Allison Hood 9/12/13 3 rd Block . Women's clothing of the 1900’s.

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1900’s -1919 fashion 

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  1. 1900’s -1919 fashion  By: Abby Evans and Allison Hood 9/12/13 3rd Block

  2. Women's clothing of the 1900’s • In first decade of the 1900s, fashionable women needed morning dresses, afternoon dresses, evening gowns, and simpler dresses that were less occasion-specific. Social rituals, especially the custom of formal visiting, dictated the use of each of these dresses, or gowns, as the fancier garments were called. Women also wore suits, with shirtwaists (blouses), and had sporting clothes for their more active pursuits like skating, cycling, and tennis. The suits were coordinated jackets and long skirts, and were made by ladies’ tailors rather than by dressmakers. Shops like A. & L. Tirocchi often made the blouses or waists, as they were known in slang.

  3. KIDS CLOTHING 1900-1919 Antique Clothing – Vintage Clothes, Victorian Dresses

  4. MENS CLOTHING The 1900s was the beginning decade of the 20th century. It was also classified as the "Machine Age", for during this time period, an amazing amount of inventions were created, that would set the tone for future generations.

  5. HISTORY • Even though European men had started wearing pants in the early 1800s, women in Europe didn't really start to wear pants until about 100 years later, in the early 1900s. Slowly more and more women started to wear pants, just as men had. But although by the 1900s pretty much all men were wearing pants, women in Europe today still wear either dresses or pants. • During World War I and World War II in the first part of the 1900s AD, it was hard to get enough cotton. People began to wear clothes made by transforming oil into thread - polyester and acrylic, often mixed with cotton. Also, people began to wear less cloth. Women started to wear short skirts instead of long skirts. Men wore tighter pants and jackets. When the World Wars were over, gradually more and more people in Europe began to have central heat in their houses and where they worked. Fewer and fewer people worked outside. So people stopped wearing so much wool, because it was too hot. They started to wear mostly cotton clothing like jeans and t-shirts and cotton dresses. Today, nearly all of the clothing most people wear is made of cotton.

  6. Women clothing Day dress Evening dresses Newmarket suit Corset

  7. shoes WOMEN MEN

  8. BONNETS AND HATS WOMENS MENS

  9. Make up By the beginning of the 1900′s Edwardian Makeup Era, women sought after a ‘pale look’. Lemon juice either consumed or applied as a face tonic was a popular method of achieving this feminine complexion. Society hostesses sought to hold on to their ‘youth’ and to cater for this demand or perhaps to encourage it . To have a tan, was to suggest that a lady was of a lower class, who worked the land. So women of the ‘better class’ remained indoors or in the shade for most of their day.

  10. Purses The word "handbag" was first used in the 1900s to describe men's satchels and briefcases. Soon feminine versions were created with compartments for fans, gloves, and cosmetics. But it wasn't until after World War I that handbags became an indispensable accessory for independent women. And we haven't looked back since!

  11. Colors used in dresses

  12. Fabrics used • There were far too many fabrics used in the 20th century to neatly encapsulate them in a couple paragraphs. The 20th century started with all natural fabrics, the same wools, silks, linens and cottons that had been in use for thousands of years. wool silk Cotton Linen

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