Re: Are these picture taking duds ?
Society in general dictated that clean white shirts and collars showed cleanliness and respectability (then and now) regardless of class. So working class men, despite their humble station and means, as well as upper class men all accepted this notion. The Millinery clerk, Henry Southworth, ran all the way home during another busy day of sales just to change his shirt collar. "Diary of Henry Southworth, 1850-51," entry for June 17, 1851.
As far as aprons are concerned, a shop keeper, etc., with a clean white apron shows that he keeps a clean neat shop, as opposed to someone who has a filthy dirty apron trying to give you service.
"...the age is, perhaps, forever gone by, when a privileged class could monopolize finery of garb; and, of all the civilized nations, it were least possible in ours." New Mirror, Oct. 21, 1843.
Am I reading the suggestion that the poor wore white / light colors out of a sense of self-respect to demonstrate cleanliness ? Never thought of it in those terms
As far as aprons are concerned, a shop keeper, etc., with a clean white apron shows that he keeps a clean neat shop, as opposed to someone who has a filthy dirty apron trying to give you service.
"...the age is, perhaps, forever gone by, when a privileged class could monopolize finery of garb; and, of all the civilized nations, it were least possible in ours." New Mirror, Oct. 21, 1843.
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