Friends,
This is my seventh year of following the hobby, and despite the on-coming sesquicentennial I have become more interested in pursuing a quality civilian impression rather than military.
Last year, a thread was posted regarding fabric sources (http://www.authentic-campaigner.com/...=fabric+source) and some discussion on men's garments arose. I would like to revisit this topic and generate some worthwhile discussion. From my point of view, I sometimes observe that reenactors (both mainstream and progressive) tend to have little or no knowledge regarding 19th century fashion. At first glance, this seems rather odd to me (I recall our first sergeant commenting once, 'You are citizens first, soldiers second' at one event).
A few topics that come to mind regarding past methods and techniques and present approaches:
Present considerations:
I would like to hear other people's thoughts, opinions, suggestions, all within a friendly round of discussion.
Fraternally yours,
This is my seventh year of following the hobby, and despite the on-coming sesquicentennial I have become more interested in pursuing a quality civilian impression rather than military.
Last year, a thread was posted regarding fabric sources (http://www.authentic-campaigner.com/...=fabric+source) and some discussion on men's garments arose. I would like to revisit this topic and generate some worthwhile discussion. From my point of view, I sometimes observe that reenactors (both mainstream and progressive) tend to have little or no knowledge regarding 19th century fashion. At first glance, this seems rather odd to me (I recall our first sergeant commenting once, 'You are citizens first, soldiers second' at one event).
A few topics that come to mind regarding past methods and techniques and present approaches:
- Context/availability of goods to an individual - A few posts in the original thread urged the importance of socioeconomic context. The primarily thought being, an individual's social position relative to others (i.e. income, education, occupation) only made available certain types of goods. How genuinely true is this? No doubt that the homestead tailor (most likely not operating as a business entrepreneur) may or may not have had access to high quality fabrics, experience with certain sewing techniques, etc. but wasn't there a desire to achieve at least the style of say, metropolitan fashion?
Were rural, independent tailors still reading texts such as, The Cutter's Monthly Journal of London and Paris Fashion, Minister's Gazette of Fashion, The Handbook of Practical Cutting on the Centre Point System by Louis Devere and at minimum, aware of these modern styles if not putting them into practice? - Fashion 18.40, 18.50, 18.60 - This is an argument I always have with a close friend of mine, would a coat from the 1850s be worn in the 1860s? Is this question subjective (personal v. what is fashionable)? Again, consider Question #1.
I wear the same Northface vest that has a tear, is getting frumpy, and perhaps smells bad, but I like it and have worn it forever. This is, of course, a modern reference. Interestingly enough, I have been reading Wilbur Salisbury's System of Actual Measurement and drafting for all styles of coats (1866) and he recommends one man owning (at minimum) four coats.
Present considerations:
- Who’s on first? For many, a civilian impression is only a secondary one. Enlisted military garments are utter garbage in comparison to citizen clothing. I am so often fooled and left befuddled at whether stitching on civilian garments are hand sewn or machined! Few people want to pay the high cost it would take to match this craftsmanship.
- $$$$ - In studying original men’s garments from the period, reproducing them requires A LOT of money. The contemporary fashion industry is dead compared to what it once was, and finding similar fabric that compares well is like searching for the Holy Grail (case in point, black superfine wool broadcloth, blue-gray kersey, doeskin). And while $500 worth of material may be acquired, the labor in constructing it should also be considered (i.e. drafting an appropriate pattern, and a lot of hand sewing).
- "How do we go about all this?" - As was stated, "But tailors were humans, so it is not unachievable."
I would like to hear other people's thoughts, opinions, suggestions, all within a friendly round of discussion.
Fraternally yours,
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