Knowledge (XXG)

1550–1600 in European fashion

Source πŸ“

611:, commonly known as the Dutch cloak, was another kind of cloak. Its name implies some military ideals and has been used since the beginning of the 16th century and therefore has many forms. The cloak is identified by its flaring out at the shoulders and the intricacy of decoration. The cloak was worn to the ankle, waist or fork. It also had specific measurements of 3/4 cut. The longer lengths were more popular for travel and came with many variations. These include: taller collars than normal, upturned collar or no collar at all and sleeves. The French cloak was quite the opposite of the Dutch and was worn anywhere from the knees to the ankle. It was typically worn over the left shoulder and included a cape that came to the elbow. It was a highly decorated cloak. The Spanish cloak or cape was well known to be stiff, have a very decorated hood and was worn to the hip or waist. The over-gown for women was very plain and worn loosely to the floor or ankle length. The Juppe had a relation to the safeguard and they would usually be worn together. The Juppe replaced the Dutch Cloak and was most likely a loose form of the doublet. 2205: 699: 1672: 2229: 393: 2913: 75: 870: 804: 1802: 2614: 2925: 1025: 2877: 1488: 408:(or both). An alternative to the gown was a short jacket or a doublet cut with a high neckline. The narrow-shouldered, wide-cuffed "trumpet" sleeves characteristic of the 1540s and 1550s in France and England disappeared in the 1560s, in favor of French and Spanish styles with narrower sleeves. Overall, the silhouette was narrow through the 1560s and gradually widened, with emphasis at the shoulder and hip. The slashing technique, seen in Italian dress in the 1560s, evolved into single or double rows of loops at the shoulder with contrasting linings. By the 1580s these had been adapted in England as padded and jeweled 989: 2554: 882: 2403: 2602: 1277: 1512: 2590: 3066: 2859: 1476: 1446: 2805: 3042: 159: 1606: 2817: 664: 1642: 135:. Black garments were worn for the most formal occasions. Black was difficult and expensive to dye, and seen as luxurious, if in an austere way. As well as Spanish courtiers, it appealed to wealthy middle-class Protestants. Regional styles were still distinct. The clothing was very intricate, elaborate and made with heavy fabrics such as velvet and raised silk, topped off with brightly coloured jewellery such as rubies, diamonds and pearls to contrast the black backdrop of the clothing. 2217: 58:, applied trims, and other forms of surface ornamentation remained prominent. The wide silhouette, conical for women with breadth at the hips and broadly square for men with width at the shoulders had reached its peak in the 1530s, and by mid-century a tall, narrow line with a V-lined waist was back in fashion. Sleeves and women's skirts then began to widen again, with emphasis at the shoulder that would continue into the next century. The characteristic garment of the period was the 3018: 1434: 858: 3118:. The woman in the foreground wears a gown with a contrasting lining tucked into her belt to display her kirtle. The woman at the back wears contrasting sleeves with her gown. Both women wear dark parlets; the V-neck front and pointed back are common in Flanders. They wear linen headdresses, probably a single rectangle of cloth pinned into a hood (note knots in the corners behind). Men wear baggy hose, short doublets (one with a longer jerkin beneath), and soft, round hats, 1568. 1241: 1205: 2247: 2385: 1037: 3054: 2901: 1307: 475:
compressed the torso into a smaller but equally geometric cone. Bodices could be high-necked or have a broad, low, square neckline, often with a slight arch at the front early in the period. They fastened with hooks in front or were laced at the side-back seam. High-necked bodices styled like men's doublets might fasten with hooks or buttons. Italian and German fashion retained the front-laced bodice of the previous period, with the ties laced in parallel rows.
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previously. As in the first half of the century, shoes were made from soft leather, velvet, or silk. In Spain, Italy, and Germany the slashing of shoes also persisted into the latter half of the century. In France however, slashing slowly went out of fashion and coloring the soles of footwear red began. Aside from slashing, shoes in this period could be adorned with all sorts of cord, quilting, and frills. Thick-soled
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the Elizabethan style by being a multipurpose piece of clothing. They could be worn on the head to protect desirable pale skin from the sun, warm the neck on a colder day, and accentuate the colour scheme of a gown or whole outfit. The upper class had silken scarves of every color to brighten up an outfit with the gold thread and tassels hanging off of it.
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were worn overall in bad weather. One description mentions strings being attached to the stirrup or foot to hold the skirts in place when riding. Mantles were also popular and described as modern day bench warmers: a square blanket or rug that is attached to the shoulder, worn around the body, or on
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Although beards were worn by many men prior to the mid-16th century, it was at this time when grooming and styling facial hair gained social significance. These styles would change very frequently, from pointed whiskers to round trims, throughout these few decades. The easiest way men were able to
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are well-documented. Belts were a surprising necessity: used either for fashion or more practical purposes. Lower classes wore them almost as tool belts with the upper classes using them as another place to add jewels and gems alike. Scarves, although not often mentioned, had a significant impact on
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The bodices of French, Spanish, and English styles were stiffened into a cone or flattened, triangular shape ending in a V at the front of the woman's waist. Italian fashion uniquely featured a broad U-shape rather than a V. Spanish women also wore boned, heavy corsets known as "Spanish bodies" that
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Fashionable shoes for men and women were similar, with a flat one-piece sole and rounded toes. Shoes were fastened with ribbons, laces or simply slipped on. Shoes and boots became narrower, followed the contours of the foot, and covered more of the foot, in some cases up to the ankle, than they had
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The ideal standard of beauty for women in the Elizabethan era was to have light or naturally red hair, a pale complexion, and red cheeks and lips, drawing on the style of Queen Elizabeth. The goal was to look very "English," since the main enemy of England was Spain, and in Spain darker hair was
1867:, usually sleeveless and often made of leather, was worn over the doublet. During this time the doublet and jerkin became increasingly more colorful and highly decorated. Waistlines dipped V-shape in front, and were padded to hold their shape. Around 1570, this padding was exaggerated into a 559:) held the skirts out in a rounded shape at the waist, falling in soft folds to the floor. In England, the Spanish farthingale was worn through the 1570s, and was gradually replaced by the French farthingale. By the 1590s, skirts were pinned to wide wheel farthingales to achieve a drum shape. 236:
The upper classes, too, were restricted. Certain materials such as cloth of gold could only be worn by the Queen, her mother, children, aunts, and sisters, as well as duchesses, marchionesses, and countesses. Viscountesses and baronesses, among others, however, were not allowed to wear this
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were used to control behaviour and to ensure that a specific social structure was maintained. These rules were well known by all the English people and penalties for violating these sumptuary laws included harsh fines. Most of the time they ended in the loss of property, title and even life.
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wears a bodice with split, round hanging sleeves. Her tight undersleeves are characteristic of Spanish influence. From the folds of her skirt, she appears to be wearing a small roll over a narrow Spanish farthingale. Note that her oversleeves are the same shape as those worn by Lettice
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wears a fashion seen in many formal portraits of Puritan women in the 1590s, characterized by a black gown worn with a blackwork stomacher and a small French farthingale or half-roll, with a fine linen ruff and moderate use of lace and other trim. She wears a tall black hat called a
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wears a black gown with vertical bands of trim on the bodice. The curved waistline and dropped front opening of the overskirt suggest that she is wearing a French roll to support her skirt. She wears a heart-shaped cap and a sheer veil decorated with a pattern of pearls, early
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featured bodices cut below the breasts and terminating in a blunt U-shape at the front waist, worn over open high-necked chemises with ruffled collars that frame the head. The Dogaressa of Venice wears a cloth of gold gown and matching cape and a sheer veil over a small cap,
1725:, 1592, wears a dark red gown (the fabric is just visible at the waist under her arms) with hanging sleeves lined in white satin to match her bodice, undersleeves, and petticoat, which is pinned to a cartwheel farthingale. She carries leather gloves and an early folding 1587:, aged 14, wears a black brocade gown over a French farthingale. The blackwork embroidery on her smock is visible above the arch of her bodice; her cuffs are also trimmed with blackwork. This style is uniquely English. She wears an open-fronted cartwheel ruff. 1330: 2159:
Gloves were often used as a social mediator to recognize the wealthy. Beginning in the second half of the 16th century, many men had trimmed tips off of the fingers of gloves in order for the admirer to see the jewels that were being hidden by the glove.
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in modest German style: she wears a light-colored petticoat trimmed with a broad band of dark fabric at the hem, with a brown bodice and sleeves and an apron. An elaborate purse hangs from her belt, and she wears a linen headdress with a sheer veil,
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c. 1580 wear gowns with wide French farthingales, long pointed bodices with revers and open ruffs, and full sleeves. This style appears in England around 1590. Note the fashionable sway-backed posture that goes with the long bodice resting on the
198:, Queen of England, was the ruler, women's fashion became one of the most important aspects of this period. As the Queen was always required to have a pure image, and although women's fashion became increasingly seductive, the idea of the perfect 2996: 4920: 2674:
wears the cartwheel ruff popular in England in the 1580s. His white satin doublet is laced with a red-and-white cord at the neck. A red cloak with gold trim is slung fashionably over one shoulder, and he wears a tall black hat with a feather,
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shown in a black doublet with golden embroidery, with matching hose. Black silk stockings, and black shoes with golden embroidery. He also wears a cape in the same fashion. He wears a black top hat with golden embroidery and white feathers,
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wears a cloth-of-gold gown with fur-lined "trumpet" sleeves and a matching overpartlet with a flared collar, probably her coronation robes, 1554. Neither the sleeves nor the overpartlet would survive as fashionable items in England into the
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in 1558, ending the domination of western Europe by a single court, but the Spanish taste for sombre richness of dress would dominate fashion for the remainder of the century. New alliances and trading patterns arose as the divide between
2322: 225:. Other nobles (lesser ones) were allowed only to wear foxes and otters. Those lower in the social hierarchy were allowed to make use of other animal products in the use of their clothing, "Padding and quilting together with the use of 750:, resulting in death before the age of 50. Other ingredients used as make-up were sulfur, alum, and tin ash. In addition to using make-up to achieve a pale complexion, women in this era were bled to take the color out of their faces. 2128:
which belongs in a deck of playing cards. The beard is broad on the higher part of the cheeks which then curves at each side to meet at the tip of the chin. This style was thought to give a martial appearance and was favoured by
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had its own customs and social rules that were reflected in their fashion. Style would depend usually of social status and Elizabethans were bound to obey The Elizabethan Sumptuary Laws, which oversaw the style and materials worn.
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wears an embroidered black high-necked bodice with round sleeves and skirt over a gold petticoat or forepart and matching undersleeves, a lace cartwheel ruff and lace cuffs, and a tall black hat with a jeweled ostrich feather, c.
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wears a severe black jerkin with the new, shorted bases over a light grey doublet with rows of parallel cuts between bands of gold braid. His rose-coloured pansied slops are also decorated with cuts and narrow applied gold trim,
1765:(assumed to be Maria de Medici) shows the adaptation of fashion to accommodate pregnancy. A loose dark gown is worn over a matching bodice and skirt, with tight white undersleeves. The lady wears an open figure-of-eight ruff of 244:, but also colours, depending on social status. Purple was only allowed to be worn by the Queen and her direct family members. Depending on social status, the colour could be used in any clothing or would be limited to mantles, 1979:
were increasingly old-fashioned, and were worn by older men for warmth indoors and out. In this period robes began their transition from general garments to traditional clothing of specific occupations, such as scholars (see
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Married and grown women covered their hair, as they had in previous periods. Early in the period, hair was parted in the center and fluffed over the temples. Later, front hair was curled and puffed high over the forehead.
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wears a gold-colored gown with tied-on sleeves and a chemise with a wide band of gold embroidery at the neckline. She holds a jewelled fur or zibellino suspended from her waist by a gold chain, Lombardy (Northern Italy),
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wears an entirely black gown with lace collar and cuffs, with white inner sleeves trimmed with gold embroidery or applied braid. Her jewellery includes a double string of pearls, a necklace, worked golden buttons and a
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of 1554: A black gown with high puffed upper sleeves is worn over a black bodice and a gray skirt with black trim. The high-necked chemise or partlet is worn open with the three pairs of ties that fasten it dangling
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likely originated in sixteenth-century Spain from bodice-like garments that were made with thick fabrics. The fashion spread from there to Italy, and then to France and (eventually) England, where it was called a
248:, jerkins, or other specific items. Lower classes were only allowed to use brown, beige, yellow, orange, green, grey and blue in wool, linen and sheepskin, while usual fabrics for upper class were silk or velvet. 1130: 2204: 1354:
wears a fitted gown with hanging sleeves over a matching arched bodice and skirt or petticoat, elaborate undersleeves, and a high-necked chemise with a ruff. Her skirt fits smoothly over a Spanish farthingale.
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wears German front-laced gowns of red satin trimmed with black bands of fabric. They wear high-necked black over-partlets with bands of gold trim and linen aprons. Their hair is tucked into jewelled cauls,
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in severe Spanish fashion of the 1560s. Her high-necked black gown with split hanging sleeves is trimmed in bows with single loops and metal tags or aiglets, and she carries a jewelled flea-fur on a chain.
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wears an open French collar with an attached ruff under a black gown with a flared collar and white lining. Her black hat with a feather is decorated with pearls and worn over a caul that covers her hair,
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wears a painted petticoat with her black gown and cartwheel farthingale. She wears an open lace ruff and a sheer, wired veil frames her head and shoulders. Her skirt is ankle-length and shows her shoes,
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is seen here again wearing a Spanish farthingale, a closed overskirt, and the typically Spanish, long, pointed oversleeves. She is wearing black, a testament to the austere side of the Spanish court, c.
3002: 1108: 1782:, formerly called Elizabeth I, wears a black gown over a white bodice and sleeves embroidered in black and gold, and a spotted white petticoat. Her hood is draped over her forehead in a style called a 455:
The gown was worn over a kirtle or petticoat (or both, for warmth). Prior to 1545, the kirtle consisted of a fitted one-piece garment. After that date, either kirtles or petticoats might have attached
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wear miniature versions of adult costume, including gown with hanging sleeves and Spanish farthingales, c. 1571. Their skirts appear to have tucks to allow them to be let down as the girls grow.
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is pinned into a capelet or collar over her shoulders, and she wears a high-crowned hat over a coif, a chin-cloth, and an apron. She carries gloves in her left hand and a chicken in her right,
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wears a black partlet, a front-lacing brown gown over a pink kirtle with matching sleeves, and a gray apron. Her collar has a narrow ruffle, and she wears a coif or cap under a straw hat, 1567.
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in England and the Netherlands, which still showed heavy Spanish influence, and the light, revealing fashions of the French and Italian courts. This distinction would carry over well into the
1671: 4568: 722:, or cap, of net-work lined in silk attached to a band, which covered the pinned up hair. This style of headdress had also been seen in Germany in the first half of the century. Widows in 467:
and most had sleeves that were pinned or laced in place. The parts of the kirtle or petticoat that showed beneath the gown were usually made of richer fabrics, especially the front panel
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is unique in a sense that it entails the groomer to take the hairs from the centre of the chin and separate the hairs toward opposite directions. This is very common variation of the
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wears a doublet with fringed braid trim that forms button loops and a matching petticoat. Janet Arnold suggests that this method of trimming may be a Polish fashion (similar trimmings
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Spanish fashion: Elizabeth of Valois, Queen of Spain, wears a black gown with floor-length sleeves lined in white, with the cone-shaped skirts created by the Spanish farthingale, 1565.
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by the 1580s. Ruffs were worn throughout Europe, by men and women of all classes, and were made of rectangular lengths of linen as long as 19 yards. Later ruffs were made of delicate
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wears the high-collared gown of the 1560s with puffed hanging sleeves. Under it she wears a high-necked bodice and tight undersleeves and a petticoat with an elaborately embroidered
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received one as a New Years gift in 1584. Gloves of perfumed leather featured embroidered cuffs. Folding fans appeared late in the period, replacing flat fans of ostrich feathers.
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shows a deep figure-of-eight ruff in pointed lace (probably reticella). Note the jeweled buttons on his doublet fasten to one side of the front opening, not down the center, 1577.
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was worn, alone or under other hats or hoods, especially in the Netherlands and England. Many embroidered and bobbin-lace-trimmed English coifs survive from this period. The
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wears a front-fastening gown with ties or points for attaching sleeves, a green apron, and a chemise with a ruffled collar. Her uncovered hair is typical of Italian custom,
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Margarethe Elisabeth von Ansbach-Bayreuth wears a tall-collared black gown over a reddish-pink doublet with tight sleeves and a matching petticoat. She wears a black hat.
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of 1554: High-necked gown, in Spanish style, trimmed with ruched white silk braid held in place with gold buttons. With ample embroidered sleeves. Hair is covered with a
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in captivity wears French fashions: her open ruff fastens at the base of the neck, and her skirt hangs in soft folds over a French farthingale. She wears a cap and veil.
322:. Toward the end of the period, polychrome (multicoloured) silk embroidery became highly desirable and fashionable for the public representation of aristocratic wealth. 3924: 3851: 1567: 2009:
of the previous period, and over time the hat was stiffened and the crown became taller and far from flat. Later, a conical felt hat with a rounded crown called a
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wears a black gown (probably velvet) over black satin sleeves. Her collar lining and chemise are embroidered with blackwork, and she wears a black hood and a fur
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fastens with buttons and loops. The detailed stitching on the lining can be seen. The black-and-white doublet below also fastens with tiny buttons, German, 1566.
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of 1588 wears a lace or cutwork-edged collar rather than a ruff, with matching sleeve cuffs. He wears a tall grey hat with a feather which is called capotain.
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of his wife Alice shows her wearing an open partlet and a closed ruff. Her blackwork sleeves have a sheer overlayer. She wears a black hood with a veil, 1578.
532:, being made in two parts which laced back and front. The corset was restricted to aristocratic fashion, and was a fitted bodice stiffened with reeds called 4577: 2613: 2156:
A baldrick or "corse" was a belt commonly worn diagonally across the chest or around the waist for holding items such as swords, daggers, bugles, and horns.
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of Florence, Italy wears a blue gown with a flared collar and tight undersleeves with horizontal trim. The uncorseted S-shaped figure is clearly shown, 1571.
869: 74: 4043: 505:. This was the only article of clothing that was worn by every woman, regardless of class. Wealthy women's smocks were embroidered and trimmed with narrow 1024: 5030: 4554: 2951: 1127:, thought to be Elizabeth I, shows her wearing a red gown with a fur lining. She wears a red flat hat over a small cap or caul that confines her hair. 4086: 2876: 396:
Elizabeth I wears padded shoulder rolls and an embroidered partlet and sleeves. Her low-necked chemise is just visible above the arched bodice, 1572.
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In a typical hairstyle of the period, front hair is curled and back hair is worn long, twisted and wound with ribbons and then coiled and pinned up.
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Hair was generally worn short, brushed back from the forehead. Longer styles were popular in the 1580s. In the 1590s, young men of fashion wore a
1544: 947: 2553: 62:, which began as a modest ruffle attached to the neckband of a shirt or smock and grew into a separate garment of fine linen, trimmed with lace, 1801: 2331: 1713: 1351: 881: 648:
circles reaching as far down as the waist. Ruffs also had a jewelry attachment such as glass beads, embroidery, gems, brooches or flowers. The
4390: 4121: 3711: 3121: 2484: 2113:, just as its name suggests, is trimmed to add emphasis to the roundness of the male cheekbones. Another common name for this style was the 2057: 1357: 1324: 1136: 3415:
Sarah A. Bendall, 'Whalebone and the Wardrobe of Elizabeth I: Whaling and the Making of Aristocratic Fashions in Sixteenth Century Europe',
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Patterns of fashion 4: The cut and construction of linen shirts, smocks, neckwear, headwear and accessories for men and women c.1540-1660.
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wears an embroidered black doublet with worked buttons and a matching robe. His high collar is worn open at the top in the French fashion.
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maintain the style of their beards was to apply starch onto their groomed faces. The most popular styles of beards at this time include:
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Patterns of fashion 4: The cut and construction of linen shirts, smocks, neckwear, headwear and accessories for men and women c.1540-1660
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Patterns of fashion 4: The cut and construction of linen shirts, smocks, neckwear, headwear and accessories for men and women c.1540-1660
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Late in the period, fashionable young men wore a plain gold ring, a jewelled earring, or a strand of black silk through one pierced ear.
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wears a white gown with embroidery and pearls. Her hair is twisted and coiled against her head and pinned in place with pearls, 1560.
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with long sleeves sewn or laced in place. Doublets were stiff, heavy garments, and were often reinforced with boning. Optionally, a
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wears a jerkin with short slashed sleeves over a red satin doublet. His velvet hose are made in wide panes over a full lining, 1566.
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wears a cutwork cartwheel ruff. Her stomacher and wired heart-shaped coif are both decorated with blackwork embroidery, 1585–90.
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wears a red doublet with gold embroidery and red paned hose in the same fashion. He also wears reddish silk stockings, c. 1560.
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in a gown with a high-arched bodice fur-lined "trumpet" sleeves, over a pink forepart and matching paned undersleeves, c. 1555.
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wears matching black doublet, paned hose, and robe trimmed with bands of gold braid or embroidery closed with jewels, c. 1550.
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and coloured silk threads, trimmed with silver-gilt and silk thread fringe and tassel, and lined with pink linen, 1580–1600 (
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of the early 1550s features a loose gown of light-weight silk over a bodice and skirt (or kirtle) and an open-necked partlet.
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lace ruff, (possibly) Polish ornamentation, a French farthingale, and Spanish severity: The "Ermine Portrait" of Elizabeth I
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was, at the time, a common name for the beard, but it referred specifically to a mustache finely groomed to a pointed tip.
1176: 87: 490:(later Countess of Southampton) at her dressing table wears an embroidered linen jacket over her rose-pink corset, 1590s. 3109: 2816: 2504: 1124: 905: 4072:
The date of 1549 on the portrait of her husband refers to the date of his execution, not of the painting, see notes at
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were worn over delicate indoor shoes to protect them from the muck of the streets. A variant on the patten popular in
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wears an embroidered black jerkin with long bases or skirts over a white satin doublet and matching padded hose, 1566.
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wears a cloth-of-red velvet gown with "trumpet" sleeves and a gold neckline with a gold embroidered overpartlet, 1557.
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and vinegar. While this makeup was effective, the white lead made it poisonous. Women in this time often contracted
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and matching wrist ruffs, which were laundered with starch to be kept stiff and bright. Over the shirt men wore a
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Jewelry was also popular among those that could afford it. Necklaces were beaded gold or silver chains and worn in
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remained in fashion into the early 17th century. It was only briefly fashionable in France, where a padded roll or
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for stiffening purposes were used to gain geometric effect with emphasis on giving the illusion of a small waist".
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continued to be worn by children and older men under their hats or alone indoors; men's coifs were usually black.
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wears a dark gown trimmed or lined in fur over fitted undersleeves. A chain is knotted at her neck. England, 1557.
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The origins of the trend for sombre colours are elusive, but are generally attributed to the growing influence of
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Italian doublet and hose decorated with applied trim and parallel cuts contrast with a severe black jerkin, 1560.
4051: 3053: 2969:, c. 1570. The girls wear gowns of striped fabric trimmed with bands of black, with linen chemises and partlets. 1947:
with rounded toes, with slashes early in the period and ties over the instep later. Boots were worn for riding.
1574:. Her blackwork sleeves have sheer linen oversleeves, and she wears wired veil with bands of gold lace, 1585–90. 1321:
over a stomacher and an open chemise are characteristic of Venetian fashion. The skirt is gathered at the waist.
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shows a linen cartwheel ruff with lace (possibly reticella) edging and the stylish small pointed beard of 1585.
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in the narrow fashions of the 1560s: Ruff, doublet, slashed leather jerkin, and paned trunk hose with codpiece.
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in a brocade gown and a partlet with a lattice of jewels, 1571. The lattice partlet is a common French fashion.
1306: 349:), alone or as an over-dye with woad, to produce a wide range of colours from blacks and greys through browns, 2840: 4527: 2462: 4629: 4352: 3151: 2438: 2270: 1926:
form of pansied slops with a very full inner layer pulled out between the panes and hanging below the knee.
1114: 938:
wears Venetian fashion of 1555. The front-lacing bodice remained fashionable in Italy and the German States.
675: 158: 3925:"Irish mantles, English nationalism: apparel and national identity in early modern English and Irish texts" 3852:"Irish mantles, English nationalism: apparel and national identity in early modern English and Irish texts" 3583:
Munro, John H. "Medieval Woollens: Textiles, Technology, and Organisation". In Jenkins (2003), pp. 214–215.
2258: 2174: 1228: 4714: 2625: 2017:
became fashionable. These became very tall toward the end of century. Hats were decorated with a jewel or
1732: 1463: 1048: 638: 195: 140: 1409: 5058: 2353: 1499: 1421: 1111:
wears a black loose gown over a bodice and a sheer linen partlet. Her brown gloves have tan cuffs, 1560.
637:
or "flea furs". The most expensive zibellini had faces and paws of goldsmith's work with jewelled eyes.
2577: 2450: 2420: 1294: 1216: 1150:
wears a black gown with puffed upper sleeves over a striped high-necked bodice or doublet. She wears a
779: 663: 1096: 1060: 839: 631:
spread from continental Europe into England in this period; costume historians call these accessories
3366: 3124:
wears an open-fronted gown laced over a kirtle and a chemise with narrow ruffs at neck and wrists. A
2987:
of Ammerzoden, aged 8, wears a red velvet dress with embroidery and several gold chains. Dutch, 1586.
2984: 2960: 2945: 2297: 1593:, wears a black bodice with pointed shoulder pads, a high collar with a ruff. A coif covers her hair. 17: 3029: 2334:
wears a shirt trimmed in black on ruff and sleeve ruffles. He wears a belt pouch at his waist. 1563.
1695: 1160:
bodice fastens with small gold buttons and loops. A double row of loops trims the shoulder, 1560–65.
1072: 1012: 578: 78:
Isaac Oliver's allegorical painting of 1590–95 contrasts virtuous and licentious dress and behavior.
5073: 4771: 4472: 2957: 2717: 2706:(d. 1598) in old age. Spanish fashion changed very little from the 1560s to the end of the century. 2658: 2372: 2192: 1824: 1084: 935: 738:
To further lighten their complexion, women wore white make-up on their faces. This make-up, called
595: 1659: 1258: 5063: 4766: 4073: 3972:
as Luxury Accessories of the Renaissance", in Robin Netherton and Gale R. Owen-Crocker, editors,
3944: 3871: 3548: 3178: 2792: 2655: 2325: 1860: 1836: 1772: 1617: 1397: 966: 815: 245: 221:
Regarding fabrics and materials for the clothes construction, only royalty was permitted to wear
107: 103: 3525: 2282: 1340: 1192: 791: 718:
was worn throughout the period in both France and England. Another fashionable headdress was a
368:
By the end of the period, there was a sharp distinction between the sober fashions favoured by
5025: 4850: 4686: 4661: 4646: 4505: 4490: 4476: 4458: 4444: 4429: 4415: 4401: 4386: 4371: 4340: 4332: 4318: 4303: 4288: 4274: 4151: 4117: 4092: 3903: 3769: 3744: 3707: 3685: 3654: 3623: 3615: 3507: 3322: 3298: 3274: 2703: 2508: 2507:
features very short pansied slops over canions and peascode-bellied doublets and jerkins, the
2481:, wears doublet and matching cape with the high collar and figure-of-eight ruff of c. 1573–74. 334: 3083: 2774:– a platform-soled mule that raised the wearer sometimes as high as two feet off the ground. 1000: 365:, while a variety of common plants produced yellow dyes, although most were prone to fading. 4992: 4987: 4982: 4966: 4961: 4956: 4951: 4827: 4761: 3936: 3863: 3540: 3420: 3198: 2783: 2671: 2517:
in a peascod-bellied doublet with full sleeves under a buff jerkin with matching hose, 1577.
2357: 1864: 1716: 1629: 765: 487: 449: 362: 2687:
wears the Queen's colors (black and white). His cloak is lined and collared with fur, 1588.
893: 4691: 4253: 3203: 3193: 3183: 1994: 1923: 1874: 1856: 1755: 1726: 1523: 739: 719: 263: 241: 206: 199: 167: 59: 3253:
Civilization and Capitalism, 15th–18th Centuries, Vol 1: The Structures of Everyday Life,
2888: 170:
grew from a narrow frill at neck and wrists to a broad "cartwheel" style that required a
4671: 2828: 1683: 827: 4641: 2723: 2541: 1981: 1547:
wears a black gown and full white sleeves trimmed with gold lace or braid. She wears a
747: 520:
were generally made of woven wool sewn to shape and held in place with ribbon garters.
230: 214: 3799: 2712:
wears a fur-lined robe with hanging sleeves over a slashed doublet and hose, with the
2643: 5088: 4892: 3552: 2713: 2125: 1820: 577:). Partlets worn over the smock but under the kirtle and gown were typically made of 4285:
Patterns of Fashion: the cut and construction of clothes for men and women 1560–1620
3948: 3875: 3504:
Patterns of Fashion: the cut and construction of clothes for men and women 1560–1620
2751: 2565: 671: 483: 4546: 3736: 3290: 2939:
wears an unusual doublet (or robe?) that appears to fasten up the back, Italy, 1551
2743: 607:
Besides keeping warm, Elizabethans cloaks were useful for any type of weather; the
464: 384: 346: 136: 4400:, Dover Publications reprint, 1963, from 1928 Harrap translation from the German, 3391: 1831: 1812: 768:
was used to darken the eyelashes and enhance the size and appearance of the eyes.
66:
or embroidery, and shaped into crisp, precise folds with starch and heated irons.
4457:, Volume 2, Woodbridge, Suffolk, UK, and Rochester, NY, the Boydell Press, 2006, 3897: 3828: 2981:
at table wear brownish doublets and slops over cannions, the Low Countries, 1585.
400:
Women's outer clothing generally consisted of a loose or fitted gown worn over a
3188: 3099: 2727: 2095:
is a small portion of the beard easing to a point around the centre of the chin.
1548: 922: 757: 715: 540: 436:. Gowns were made in a variety of styles: Loose or fitted (called in England a 369: 358: 342: 303: 267: 257: 171: 144: 32: 3367:"Daily Life - Renaissance and Reformation Reference Library | Encyclopedia.com" 513:
wore linen or silk drawers, but no evidence that drawers were worn in England.
4541: 2529:
wears a pinked white doublet with worked buttons and a plain linen ruff, 1579.
743: 645: 544: 183: 120: 55: 1719:, Countess of Shrewsbury, wears a black gown and cap with a linen ruff, 1590. 3424: 3208: 3168: 3005:
wears a black jacket, black silk breeches, a ruff and hat, Netherlands, 1599
2948:
wears fashionable dresses suitable for aristocratic daughters in Italy, 1555
2694: 2498: 1972: 1936: 1788: 1151: 764:
were used as dyes to achieve the bright red effects on the cheeks and lips.
761: 753: 633: 590: 510: 495: 405: 287: 283: 175: 37: 3940: 3867: 2999:
wears a lace trimmed coif, lace collar and a lace apron, Netherlands, 1596
2147:, although it is greater in length and it is more noticeably spread apart. 656:
While travelling, noblewomen would wear oval masks of black velvet called
3125: 2356:
in a black jerkin over a white satin doublet decorated with a pattern of
2103: 1878: 1745: 1347: 1147: 723: 354: 319: 116: 51: 54:
was characterized by increased opulence. Contrasting fabrics, slashes,
4088:
The Anatomy of Fashion: Dressing the Body from the Renaissance to Today
3544: 2771: 2762: 2018: 608: 568: 502: 338: 299: 279: 271: 179: 63: 4756: 4522: 4223:
Cunnington, C. Willett; Phillis Cunnington and Charles Beard (1960).
3341: 2767: 2068: 1968: 1964: 1363: 973: 657: 628: 524: 456: 401: 350: 330: 311: 295: 226: 152: 148: 128: 99: 95: 48: 2136:; a very sleek trim of the beard in which is cuts close to the chin. 2024:
Close-fitting caps covering the ears and tied under the chin called
123:
countries became more pronounced. The severe, rigid fashions of the
1975:, were fashionable. Long cloaks were worn in cold and wet weather. 573:
A low neckline might be filled with an infill (called in English a
4624: 2750: 2742: 2060:
in 1596. It resembles a large and discussed growth upon the chin.
1956: 1944: 1913:
were loose hose reaching just below the knee. Slops could also be
1852: 1849: 1830: 1819:
wears a stiffened, gathered hat with a jeweled band. He wears the
1811: 1570:
wears a cartwheel ruff slightly open at the front, supported by a
697: 670: 662: 624: 600: 499: 482: 391: 383: 326: 275: 222: 157: 132: 124: 91: 73: 31: 4116:. Great Britain: National Trust Enterprises Limited. p. 28. 3743:. Hollywood, CA: Quite Specific Media Group. pp. 13, 50–51. 3706:. Great Britain: National Trust Enterprises Limited. p. 20. 1839:
wears an embroidered cape with a collar over his doublet c. 1580.
3173: 2025: 1976: 1960: 925:, instead of the traditional white coif, ornamented with pearls. 707: 689: 506: 307: 291: 262:
The general trend towards abundant surface ornamentation in the
4550: 2782:
Toddler boys wore gowns or skirts and doublets until they were
599:
over their dresses for riding or travel on dirty roads. Hooded
4150:. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. p. 59. 2002: 620: 315: 3899:
Fashion and Fancy: Dress and Meaning in Rembrandt's Paintings
3526:"East &West: Textiles and Fashion in Early Modern Europe" 2973:
Infantas Isabella Clara Eugenia and Catalina Micaela of Spain
2491:
doublet over heavily padded hose. His shirt has a small ruff.
1893:, fitted hose that ended above the knee. Trunk hose could be 1889:
were short padded hose. Very short trunk hose were worn over
4368:
Dynasties: Painting in Tudor and Jacobean England 1530–1630
2035:
was worn informally indoors; these were often embroidered.
4502:
A survey of historic costume: A history of Western dress.
4414:, translated by Claudia Rosoux, Paul Hamlyn/Crown, 1968, 3297:. Hollywood, CA: Quite Specific Media Group. p. 10. 2993:
wears a coif, ruff, and lace-trimmed cuffs, England, 1590
4410:
KybalovΓ‘, Ludmila, Olga HerbenovΓ‘, and Milena LamarovΓ‘:
4038: 4036: 4034: 3682:
A survey of historic costume: A history of Western dress
3440:. New York: Pub Drama Book Publishers. pp. 230–233. 3984: 3982: 2005:
with a gathered crown was worn. These derived from the
1327:
by Alonso SΓ‘nchez Coello wearing Spanish fashion, 1571.
420:
The common upper garment was a gown, called in Spanish
2700:, or with the sleeves hanging in front and back, 1588. 2031:
A conical cap of linen with a turned up brim called a
4542:
Power Dressing and Renaissance Fashion: Sarah Bendall
4453:
Netherton, Robin, and Gale R. Owen-Crocker, editors,
4242:. New York, NY: Dover Publications. pp. 227–274. 357:. Inexpensive reds, oranges and pinks were dyed with 4329:
The Visual History of Costume: The Sixteenth Century
3612:
The Visual History of Costume: The Sixteenth Century
3102:
in contemporary dress shows a table servant wearing
1998:, a long section of hair hanging over one shoulder. 1932:
were semi-fitted hose reaching just below the knee.
5051: 5008: 4975: 4944: 4913: 4843: 4780: 4679: 4605: 4426:
The Tudor tailor: Reconstructing 16th-century dress
4008: 4006: 3651:
The Tudor tailor: Reconstructing 16th-century dress
2726:of red satin, couched and embroidered with silver, 3158:with full skirts, hose, hats, and low shoes, 1594. 692:and false hairpieces were used to extend the hair. 266:was expressed in clothing, especially amongst the 4302:Hollywood, CA: Quite Specific Media Group, 2008, 3336: 3334: 4315:The Art of Dress: Clothing and Society 1500–1914 4148:Renaissance Clothing and the Materials of Memory 4146:Jones, Ann Rosalind; Stallybrass, Peter (2000). 4014:"The Painted Lady-Tudor Portraits at the Ferens" 3240:The Art of Dress: Clothing and Society 1500–1914 1551:with a jewelled biliment and a black veil, 1582. 3255:p. 317, William Collins & Sons, London 1981 4528:Description Of Elizabethan England, 1577(from 4218: 4216: 4214: 4114:The Art of Dress Clothes and Society 1500-1914 3704:The Art of Dress Clothes and Society 1500-1915 3649:Mikhaila, Ninya; Malcolm-Davies, Jane (2006). 106:, handed over the kingdom of Spain to his son 27:Costume in the second half of the 16th century 4562: 4169: 4167: 3968:Sherrill, Tawny: "Fleas, Furs, and Fashions: 3819: 3817: 3676: 3674: 3672: 3670: 3438:A Visual History of Costume: The 16th Century 678:in a widow's black hood and veil, after 1559. 143:wardrobe records identifies French, Italian, 8: 4439:Montupet, Janine, and Ghislaine Schoeller: 4424:Mikhaila, Ninya, and Malcolm-Davies, Jane: 3800:"Recreating 16th and 17th Century Clothing" 3498: 3496: 3494: 3492: 3490: 3488: 3317:Montupet, Janine, and Ghislaine Schoeller: 1555:The Infanta Isabella Clara Eugenia of Spain 4569: 4555: 4547: 3684:, New York: Fairchild Publications, 1994, 3644: 3642: 3640: 3638: 3636: 1848:Men's fashionable clothing consisted of a 1749:over a sheer linen cap and simple jewelry. 1177:Sisters Ermengard and Walburg von Rietberg 539:Skirts were held in the proper shape by a 4532:), Chapter VII: Of Our Apparel And Attire 4383:The Cambridge History of Western Textiles 4287:, Macmillan 1985. Revised edition 1986. ( 3929:Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies 3856:Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies 3726:Kemper, Rachel H: "Costume", 1992, pp. 82 3606: 3604: 3602: 3524:Lemire, Beverly; Riello, Giorgio (2008). 3506:, Macmillan 1985. Revised edition 1986. ( 1877:, in variety of styles, were worn with a 1339:is portrayed by the French court painter 726:wore black hoods with sheer black veils. 4504:New York, Fairchild Publications, 1994, 3768:. Yale University Press. pp. 6–12. 3566: 3564: 3562: 1800: 619:The fashion for wearing or carrying the 329:and possibly the importation of Spanish 240:Not only fabrics were restricted on the 4207:. London: Adam & Charles Black LTD. 3219: 3013: 2788: 2693:wears a loose military jacket called a 2537: 2368: 2170: 1792:or flea-fur, with a jeweled face, 1595. 1601: 1393: 1188: 984: 775: 1905:) over a full inner layer or lining. 5105:History of clothing (Western fashion) 4273:, W S Maney and Son Ltd, Leeds 1988. 4044:"Beauty History: The Elizabethan Era" 3896:Winkel, Marieke de (1 January 2006). 3273:, W S Maney and Son Ltd, Leeds 1988. 660:to protect their faces from the sun. 444:or long sleeves; and floor length (a 302:were further ornamented with applied 18:1550–1600 in Western European fashion 7: 4615:Prehistory of nakedness and clothing 4385:, Cambridge University Press, 2003, 3265: 3263: 3261: 2497:'s shirt collar is embroidered with 4271:Queen Elizabeth's Wardrobe Unlock'd 4227:. London: Adam & Charles Black. 3453:Daily Life in Ancient Modern London 3271:Queen Elizabeth's Wardrobe Unlock'd 1115:Margaret Audley, Duchess of Norfolk 706:A close-fitting linen cap called a 4363:. New York: Thomas Yoseloff, 1964. 3392:"Putting on an Elizabethan Outfit" 3106:with full, drooping linings, 1565. 1154:cap beneath a sheer veil, 1560–65. 667:Curled hair, twisted and pinned up 25: 4412:Pictorial Encyclopedia of Fashion 2071:. It is also very similar to the 2021:, and were worn indoors and out. 2001:Through the 1570s, a soft fabric 1963:, usually hip-length, often with 1578:Infanta Catalina Micaela of Spain 1562:Nicholas Hilliard's Unknown Woman 1325:Consort of Spain, Anna of Austria 155:and sleeves, as well as Spanish. 4670: 4591:History of clothing and textiles 3653:. London: Batsford. p. 20. 3082: 3064: 3052: 3040: 3028: 3016: 2923: 2911: 2899: 2887: 2875: 2857: 2839: 2827: 2815: 2803: 2791: 2642: 2624: 2612: 2600: 2588: 2576: 2564: 2552: 2540: 2461: 2449: 2437: 2419: 2401: 2383: 2371: 2281: 2269: 2257: 2245: 2227: 2215: 2203: 2191: 2173: 1806:Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester 1694: 1682: 1670: 1658: 1640: 1628: 1616: 1604: 1510: 1498: 1486: 1474: 1462: 1444: 1432: 1420: 1408: 1396: 1305: 1293: 1275: 1257: 1239: 1227: 1215: 1203: 1191: 1164:Isabel de Valois, Queen of Spain 1095: 1083: 1071: 1059: 1047: 1035: 1023: 1011: 999: 987: 976:over her shoulders, later 1550s. 892: 880: 868: 856: 838: 826: 814: 802: 790: 778: 127:were dominant everywhere except 4998:impact of the COVID-19 pandemic 4489:. Yale University Press, 2001, 4225:A Dictionary of English Costume 4205:A Dictionary of English Costume 4184:Patterns of Fashion...1560–1620 2666:Miniature of Sir Walter Raleigh 1367:were worn in the 19th century). 961:Mary Howard, Duchess of Norfolk 45:Fashion in the period 1550–1600 4523:The Elizabethan Costuming Page 4487:The Corset: A Cultural History 4455:Medieval Clothing and Textiles 3974:Medieval Clothing and Textiles 3902:. Amsterdam University Press. 3766:The Corset: A Cultural History 2521:Miniature of the Duc d'AlenΓ§on 2479:Henry III of France and Poland 2332:Thomas Howard, Duke of Norfolk 2106:in which it obtained its name. 1131:Woman wearing a red silk dress 650:jewels of Mary, Queen of Scots 110:and the Empire to his brother 1: 3142: 3129: 3072: 2865: 2847: 2632: 2427: 2409: 2391: 2235: 2181: 2124:derives from the design of a 1702: 1648: 1452: 1377:Nicholas Hilliard's miniature 1283: 1265: 1247: 846: 463:that fastened with lacing or 4469:Tudor and Jacobean Jewellery 2056:, which was named after the 1773:Italian fashion of the 1590s 1170:Portrait of Elsbeth Lochmann 604:the knees for extra warmth. 547:. In Spain, the cone-shaped 494:During this period, women's 4914:1920s–1950s Western fashion 4844:1830s–1910s Western fashion 4781:1500s–1820s Western fashion 4370:. New York: Rizzoli, 1995. 4173:Tortora (1994), pp. 158160. 3455:. Online Book. p. 127. 2102:is shaped similarly to the 970:Mary Nevill, Baroness Dacre 702:Ribboned hairstyles ca 1570 416:Gown, kirtle, and petticoat 202:women was never forgotten. 182:lace that evolved into the 5131: 4428:. London: Batsford, 2006, 1538:Ladies of the French court 566: 255: 36:English opulence, Italian 5110:Medieval European costume 4668: 4596:History of fashion design 4585: 4359:Digby, George Wingfield. 3923:Zeigler, John R. (2013). 3850:Zeigler, John R. (2013). 3570:Digby, George Wingfield: 3533:Journal of Social History 2755:Elizabeth I's shoes, 1592 2534:Style gallery 1580s–1590s 2167:Style gallery 1550s–1560s 1901:, with strips of fabric ( 954:Bianca Ponzoni Anguissola 314:embroidery, spangles and 4921:Suffrage Movement period 4537:Fathingales and Bumrolls 4203:; Charles Beard (1960). 4112:Ashelford, Jane (1996). 3802:. The Renaissance Tailor 3764:Steele, Valerie (2001). 3702:Ashelford, Jane (1996). 3472:World History in Context 3451:Norris, Herbert (1997). 2952:FranΓ§ois Duke of AlenΓ§on 498:consisted of a washable 428:, and in English either 4580:of clothing and fashion 4353:20,000 Years of Fashion 4136:Tortora (1994), p. 157. 4085:Vincent, Susan (2009). 3976:, Volume 2, pp. 121–150 3825:"Late Period Outerware" 3788:Mikhaila (2006), p. 21. 3594:20,000 Years of Fashion 3425:10.4000/apparences.3653 3228:20,000 Years of Fashion 2777: 2344:Highnecked black jerkin 2310:Don Gabriel de la Cueva 1988:Hairstyles and headgear 1796: 1133:, with slashed sleeves. 683:Hairstyles and headgear 379: 5100:16th century in Europe 4530:Holinshed's Chronicles 4361:Elizabethan Embroidery 4197:Cunnington, C. Willett 3988:Tortora (1994), p. 167 3572:Elizabethan Embroidery 3436:Arnold, Janet (1983). 3396:elizabethancostume.net 3346:elizabethan-era.org.uk 3110:Dutch vegetable seller 3010:Working class clothing 2756: 2748: 2710:Sir Christopher Hatton 2495:Sir Christopher Hatton 1881:early in the period. 1840: 1828: 1809: 1125:The Gripsholm Portrait 936:Titian's Lady in White 703: 679: 668: 536:, wood, or whalebone. 491: 397: 389: 163: 79: 41: 5009:By country and region 4441:Lace: The Elegant Web 4356:, Harry Abrams, 1966. 4238:Kohler, Carl (1963). 4048:Beautiful With Brains 3941:10.1353/jem.2013.0001 3868:10.1353/jem.2013.0001 3319:Lace: The Elegant Web 2991:A five-year-old child 2754: 2746: 2354:Henry Lee of Ditchley 1834: 1815: 1804: 1158:Isabella de' Medici's 701: 674: 666: 555:(called in England a 486: 448:) or with a trailing 395: 387: 186:of the 17th century. 161: 77: 35: 5095:16th-century fashion 4976:2000–present fashion 4467:Scarisbrick, Diana, 4398:A History of Costume 4381:Jenkins, David, ed. 4240:A History of Costume 4091:. Berg. p. 49. 3466:Toht, David (2001). 3371:www.encyclopedia.com 3139:Italian fruit seller 3122:English countrywoman 3116:Flemish country folk 3003:Hector van Bouricius 2985:Catherine van Arckel 2961:Marguerite of Valois 2946:Sofonisba Anguissola 2515:Sir Martin Frobisher 2475:Henry, Duke of Anjou 2338:Charles IX of France 2298:Edward VI of England 2141:Swallow's Tail Beard 1786:, and she carries a 1780:Unknown English lady 1371:Mary, Queen of Scots 1337:Elizabeth of Austria 942:Catherine de' Medici 676:Catherine de' Medici 5016:Indian subcontinent 4945:1960s-1990s fashion 4350:Boucher, FranΓ§ois: 4254:"Elizabethan Shoes" 4074:Image:LadyDacre.jpg 4054:on 13 February 2015 3592:Boucher, FranΓ§ois: 3226:Boucher, FranΓ§ois: 2958:The French princess 2937:Francesco de Medici 2747:Men's shoes c. 1600 2718:Order of the Garter 2659:Johan III of Sweden 2365:Style gallery 1570s 2316:Prospero Alessandri 1825:Order of the Garter 1817:The Earl of Lincoln 1598:Style gallery 1590s 1390:Style gallery 1580s 1185:Style gallery 1570s 1137:Mary Queen of Scots 981:Style gallery 1560s 772:Style gallery 1550s 549:Spanish farthingale 374:seventeenth century 139:in her analysis of 4500:Tortora, Phyllis: 4366:Hearn, Karen, ed. 4201:Phillis Cunnington 3999:History of Costume 3798:Tammie L. Dupuis. 3680:Tortora, Phyllis: 3545:10.1353/jsh.0.0019 2778:Children's fashion 2757: 2749: 2704:Philip II of Spain 2685:Sir Walter Raleigh 2326:Eric XIV of Sweden 2304:Antoine de Bourbon 1841: 1837:John III of Sweden 1829: 1810: 1350:painting c. 1572, 906:Florentine fashion 704: 680: 669: 589:Women wore sturdy 553:French farthingale 492: 398: 390: 164: 104:Holy Roman Emperor 80: 42: 5082: 5081: 4485:Steele, Valerie: 4391:978-0-52134-107-3 4339:), 1994 reprint ( 4327:Ashelford, Jane. 4313:Ashelford, Jane: 4123:978-0-8109-6317-7 3713:978-0-8109-6317-7 3622:), 1994 reprint ( 3610:Ashelford, Jane: 3596:, pp. 219 and 244 3574:, Thomas Yoseloff 3342:"ELIZABETHAN ERA" 3251:Fernand Braudel, 3238:Ashelford, Jane: 3152:English gardeners 2954:, France, 1556–58 2698:colley-westonward 2509:Valois Tapestries 2485:An Italian tailor 2358:armillary spheres 2079:style of beards. 1924:Northern European 1585:Elizabeth Brydges 1331:Leonora di Toledo 1319:Horizontal lacing 1109:Eleanor of Toledo 742:, was made up of 335:The Low Countries 252:Fabrics and trims 190:Elizabethan style 141:Queen Elizabeth's 16:(Redirected from 5122: 4828:Directoire style 4674: 4571: 4564: 4557: 4548: 4331:. 1983 edition ( 4317:, Abrams, 1996. 4258: 4257: 4250: 4244: 4243: 4235: 4229: 4228: 4220: 4209: 4208: 4193: 4187: 4180: 4174: 4171: 4162: 4161: 4143: 4137: 4134: 4128: 4127: 4109: 4103: 4102: 4082: 4076: 4070: 4064: 4063: 4061: 4059: 4050:. 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Archived from 3821: 3812: 3811: 3809: 3807: 3795: 3789: 3786: 3780: 3779: 3761: 3755: 3754: 3733: 3727: 3724: 3718: 3717: 3699: 3693: 3692:, pages 164–165. 3678: 3665: 3664: 3646: 3631: 3614:, 1983 edition ( 3608: 3597: 3590: 3584: 3581: 3575: 3568: 3557: 3556: 3530: 3521: 3515: 3500: 3483: 3482: 3480: 3478: 3463: 3457: 3456: 3448: 3442: 3441: 3433: 3427: 3413: 3407: 3406: 3404: 3402: 3388: 3382: 3381: 3379: 3377: 3363: 3357: 3356: 3354: 3352: 3338: 3329: 3315: 3309: 3308: 3287: 3281: 3267: 3256: 3249: 3243: 3236: 3230: 3224: 3147: 3144: 3134: 3131: 3098:painting of the 3086: 3077: 3074: 3068: 3056: 3044: 3032: 3020: 2967:Italian children 2927: 2915: 2903: 2891: 2879: 2870: 2867: 2861: 2852: 2849: 2843: 2831: 2819: 2807: 2795: 2646: 2637: 2634: 2628: 2616: 2604: 2592: 2580: 2568: 2556: 2544: 2465: 2453: 2441: 2432: 2429: 2423: 2414: 2411: 2405: 2396: 2393: 2387: 2375: 2285: 2273: 2261: 2249: 2240: 2237: 2231: 2219: 2207: 2195: 2186: 2183: 2177: 2058:CΓ‘diz Expedition 1967:, or a military 1717:Bess of Hardwick 1707: 1704: 1698: 1686: 1674: 1662: 1653: 1650: 1644: 1632: 1620: 1608: 1514: 1502: 1490: 1478: 1466: 1457: 1454: 1448: 1436: 1424: 1412: 1400: 1309: 1297: 1288: 1285: 1279: 1270: 1267: 1261: 1252: 1249: 1243: 1231: 1219: 1207: 1195: 1099: 1087: 1075: 1063: 1051: 1039: 1027: 1015: 1003: 991: 948:An unknown woman 896: 884: 872: 860: 851: 848: 842: 830: 818: 806: 794: 782: 503:chemise or smock 488:Elizabeth Vernon 21: 5130: 5129: 5125: 5124: 5123: 5121: 5120: 5119: 5115:Elizabethan era 5085: 5084: 5083: 5078: 5047: 5004: 4971: 4940: 4909: 4839: 4776: 4675: 4666: 4601: 4600: 4581: 4575: 4519: 4473:Tate Publishing 4298:Arnold, Janet: 4283:Arnold, Janet: 4269:Arnold, Janet: 4266: 4261: 4252: 4251: 4247: 4237: 4236: 4232: 4222: 4221: 4212: 4195: 4194: 4190: 4181: 4177: 4172: 4165: 4158: 4145: 4144: 4140: 4135: 4131: 4124: 4111: 4110: 4106: 4099: 4084: 4083: 4079: 4071: 4067: 4057: 4055: 4042: 4041: 4032: 4022: 4020: 4012: 4011: 4004: 3996: 3992: 3987: 3980: 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2780: 2741: 2672:Sir Henry Unton 2650: 2647: 2638: 2635: 2629: 2620: 2617: 2608: 2605: 2596: 2593: 2584: 2581: 2572: 2569: 2560: 2557: 2548: 2545: 2536: 2469: 2466: 2457: 2454: 2445: 2442: 2433: 2430: 2424: 2415: 2412: 2406: 2397: 2394: 2388: 2379: 2376: 2367: 2289: 2286: 2277: 2274: 2265: 2262: 2253: 2250: 2241: 2238: 2232: 2223: 2220: 2211: 2208: 2199: 2196: 2187: 2184: 2178: 2169: 2154: 2073:'Pick-a-devant 2041: 1990: 1953: 1855:with collar or 1846: 1799: 1756:Maria de Medici 1708: 1705: 1699: 1690: 1687: 1678: 1675: 1666: 1663: 1654: 1651: 1645: 1636: 1633: 1624: 1621: 1612: 1609: 1600: 1524:Lettice Knollys 1518: 1515: 1506: 1503: 1494: 1491: 1482: 1479: 1470: 1467: 1458: 1455: 1449: 1440: 1437: 1428: 1425: 1416: 1413: 1404: 1401: 1392: 1383:German fashion: 1341:FranΓ§ois Clouet 1313: 1310: 1301: 1298: 1289: 1286: 1280: 1271: 1268: 1262: 1253: 1250: 1244: 1235: 1232: 1223: 1220: 1211: 1208: 1199: 1196: 1187: 1103: 1100: 1091: 1088: 1079: 1076: 1067: 1064: 1055: 1052: 1043: 1040: 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5098: 5096: 5093: 5092: 5090: 5075: 5072: 5070: 5067: 5065: 5062: 5060: 5057: 5056: 5054: 5050: 5044: 5043:Western world 5041: 5039: 5036: 5032: 5029: 5028: 5027: 5024: 5022: 5019: 5017: 5014: 5013: 5011: 5007: 4999: 4996: 4995: 4994: 4991: 4989: 4986: 4984: 4981: 4980: 4978: 4974: 4968: 4965: 4963: 4960: 4958: 4955: 4953: 4950: 4949: 4947: 4943: 4937: 4934: 4932: 4929: 4927: 4924: 4922: 4919: 4918: 4916: 4912: 4904: 4901: 4899: 4896: 4895: 4894: 4891: 4887: 4884: 4882: 4879: 4877: 4874: 4872: 4869: 4867: 4864: 4862: 4859: 4857: 4854: 4853: 4852: 4849: 4848: 4846: 4842: 4836: 4833: 4829: 4826: 4825: 4824: 4821: 4819: 4816: 4814: 4811: 4809: 4806: 4804: 4801: 4799: 4796: 4794: 4791: 4789: 4786: 4785: 4783: 4779: 4773: 4770: 4768: 4765: 4763: 4760: 4758: 4755: 4751: 4748: 4746: 4743: 4741: 4738: 4736: 4733: 4731: 4728: 4727: 4725: 4723: 4720: 4716: 4713: 4711: 4708: 4706: 4703: 4701: 4698: 4697: 4695: 4693: 4690: 4688: 4685: 4684: 4682: 4678: 4673: 4663: 4660: 4658: 4655: 4653: 4650: 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Index

1550–1600 in Western European fashion

reticella
European
clothing
embroidery
ruff
cutwork

Charles V
Spain
Naples
Sicily
Holy Roman Emperor
Philip II
Ferdinand I
Catholic
Protestant
Spanish court
France
Italy
Janet Arnold
Queen Elizabeth's
Dutch
Polish
bodices

ruffs
wire support
reticella

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