Staying in Style: Books on Fashion

Three headdresses, 1801

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October saw another Fashion Week in Toronto come and go - one of many events that mark the seasons of the fashion calendar. 

Fashions of London and Paris, title page
De re vestiarla librve, ac rafpio excerpta audita vulgatis lingua interpretatione, in adolescentulorum gratiam atque vtilitatem. Secvnda editio. Parisiis, ex officina Roberti Stephani typographi regii. M.D.L.X.I.

Our interest in fashion is not new: clothing is a way to demonstrate belonging, status, wealth or purpose, as well as to express individuality. The oldest book in the collection of the ROM Library is a book about fashion. The Little Book on Clothing, published in 1541, is a diminutive book in Latin equipped with a transation into French to ensure the accessibility of the text for a greater number of readers. 

The Little Book on Clothing is an early example of a genre of books dedicated to describing, explaining, and sometimes illustrating past and current domestic and foreign fashions. One of the most enduring of these costume books is Cesare Vecellio’s Of Costumes, Ancient and Modern, of Different Parts of the World. 

Venetian Woman dying her hair blonde
A young man of the Compagna della Calza
Initially published in the lat 16th century, the book remains in print to this day. This edition, from 1859, shows two fashionable young people: a Venetian lady of the 16th century wearing the distinctive wide brimmed hat used when bleaching hair to a fashionable blonde, and a young man proclaiming his membership in the prestigious ‘Compagnia della Calza” or ‘Socks Club’ with his  striped stockings. 

Publications that we might recognize as the ancestors of today’s fashion magazine were very popular in the early 19th century.  Then, as now, fashions often reflected current events. With the popularity of the Grand Tour, the rediscovery of the ancient world at Pompeii, and Napoleon’s Egyptian campaigns, the ‘Antique’ and the ‘Oriental’ became popular modes of dress. The dresses below are described with terms such as à la Mameluc, Egyptian brown, the ‘Oriental Style’, and embellished with details such as a turban à la Niobé, and Roman ‘vestal veil’.

A woman in a long, flowing brown dress with puffed sleeves, holding a pink parasol behind her back.
Fashion plate showing a woman in a long white dress with black accents and a large feathered hat, holding a large fur muff.
A woman in a long white flowing gown chained and shackled, holding a key, standing next to a pedestal with a skull.

Such influences are also seen in the names for styles of men’s neckcloths, such as the ‘Corsican’, ‘Eastern’, ‘Indian’ and even ‘Yankee’.

Black and white drawings of hands and wrist cloth coverings with labels such as cuff, band, and wrist cloth.

Fashionable ladies in the young countries of North America were keen to keep abreast of developments in centres such as London and Paris, as well as those nearer to home. Buying an imported dress made in Europe was beyond the means of many, but periodicals such as Peterson’s Magazine presented women not only with illustrations, but also with schematic drawings and even patterns, so that an enterprising reader could make her own. 

Two black and white fashion sketches of women wearing Victorian-era dresses, one holding an umbrella.

Budget was also a concern for men who wished to cut a dash: a young officer might have consulted books like The Whole Art of Dress! which boldly claims to outfit a man of elegance and fashion with an ‘enormous savings of Thirty percent!!!’.

The Whole Art of Dress! The Man of the Present; The Whole Art of Dress! With a complete code to the English Military Uniforms from the Conquest in the Gentleman's Costume, or a new and complete guide to the most elegant dress at Court, at Balls and Assemblies...

Clothes adapt to reflect our lifestyles and activities. In the early 20th century there was a new interest in sports among women as well as men, with golf and swimming becoming particularly popular. New clothes were required to accommodate these pursuits, and sportswear was born.

A minimalist illustration of a woman in red attire holding a golf club in a landscape with hills and a caddie carrying golf clubs.
Woman in a yellow swimming cap, white swimsuit, and brown shoes holding a hat, standing by the water's edge on a beach.

And finally, accessories. Until quite recently, items such as  hats, bonnets, neckties, and gloves were considered essential to a complete outfit, and could not be left behind. These accessories were often tailored to suit the task at hand, such as the mens riding gloves, or womens evening gloves shown here. 

Illustration of a long glove with measurements marked, a high-heeled shoe with colorful stripes, and a foot with marked points.
Shoes too reflected function as well as fashion, from the daring rainbow high heel of the early 20th century, to the raised platform slipper from 1786, designed to keep long hems and elegant footwear out of muddy streets. Another example of a platform shoe can be seen at the feet of the Ventian lady above.

Leather boot with knee pad, wrist cuff with buckle, shoe with heel and front buckle, leather belt, and strap buckle.

 

 

A vertical artwork of brown bamboo stalks with blue and white morning glory flowers and green leaves entwining them.

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