- Female Costume Fifteenth century, 1st half
- Female - Period Henry VIII
- Female - Fifteenth century, 2nd half
- Female - Period 1625-1660
- Female - End of fifteenth century
- Fellah Women
Fellah Women The dress of a large proportion of those women of the lower orders who are not of the poorest class consists of a pair of trousers or drawers (similar in form to the shintiyán of the ladies, but generally of plain white cotton or linen), a blue linen or cotton shirt (not quite so full as that of the men), a burko’ of a kind of coarse black crape, and a dark blue tarhah of muslin or linen. Some wear over the shirt, or instead of the latter, a linen tób, of the same form as that of the ladies. The sleeves of this are often turned up over the head; either to prevent their being incommodious, or to supply the place of a tarhah. - Evening dress of Directoire and early first Empire 1798 - 1804
Evening dress of Directoire and early first Empire 1798 - 1804 - Ethiopian Noble Lady
- End of fifteenth century
- Elizabethan or Marie Stuart Period - 1558 - 1600
Elizabethan or Marie Stuart Period - 1558 - 1600 - Elizabethan or Henry III Period - showing Medicis Collar
Elizabethan or Henry III Period - showing Medicis Collar - Elizabethan or Henry III - 1570
Elizabethan or Henry III - 1570 - Elizabethan modes
- Egyptian Queen
Egyptian queen - Egyptian king
Egyptian king - Egyptian Female Costume
Egyptian Female Costume - Egyptian
- Egyptian
- Ecclesiastical Costume in the Twelfth Century
- Early days of the crinoline - 1855
Early days of the crinoline - 1855 - Dress of Ladies of Quality
(From Sandford's 'Coronation Procession of James II.') - Details of female fashion 1820 - 1828
- Days of the pannier
Days of the pannier - Danes, Scandinavians and Gauls
- Court Dress of tudor or Louis XI Period
Court Dress of tudor or Louis XI Period - Court Dress of 1390
Court Dress of 1390 - Court Dress 1550 - Tudor or Francis I
Court Dress 1550 - Tudor or Francis I - Court Dress 1540 - Tudor or Francis I
Court Dress 1540 - Tudor or Francis I - Court Dress - Latter part of 13th Century
Court Dress - Latter part of 13th Century - Court Dress - Early 15th Century
Court Dress - Early 15th Century - Court costume Louis XVI - about 1780
Court costume Louis XVI - about 1780 - Costumes. Period, James I
- Costumes. Period James I
- Costumes, 1570-1605
- Costumes, 1568-1610
- Costumes, 1554-1580
- Costumes, 1554-1568
- Costumes Fifteenth century, 2nd half
- Costume types. Period Charles II
- Costume type. 1695-1710
- Costume of the Franks in the Eighth Century
Costume of the Franks in the Eighth Century - Costume of Shepherds in the Twelfth Century
- Costume of Manservant - reign of Louis XIII
Costume of Manservant - reign of Louis XIII - Costume of a Lawyer
(From a broadside, dated 1623.) - Costume notes. Period 1670-1690
- Costume notes, 1814-1816
- Costume notes, 1811-1812
- Costume notes, 1790-1800
- Costume notes, 1770-1780
- Costume for young girl. Period, 1821
Costume for young girl. Period, 1821 - Costume - Fifteenth century
- Costume - Fifteenth century, 1st half
- Corean Hat
But the most curious part of Corean dress is the hat. There are many different kinds. There are hats for young and hats for old, hats for out-doors and hats for the house, hats for people of different occupations. The commonest out-door hat is round, square-topped, and with the wide, flat, brim halfway up the crown. The hats worn at the royal court are like high skull-caps, with wide flaps or wings projecting at the sides. The straw hats worn by drovers and people in mourning are shaped like the top of a parasol and measure two feet and a half across. - Colobium
Shape. This garment varied in width across the shoulders. The greater the distance between the neck-hole and the edge of the top corner (see A B), the more the upper arm was hidden. This has the misleading effect of a sleeve to the elbow. The Romans had a great aversion to anything in the nature of a close arm covering, so the fashion of wearing long shaped separate sleeves, set by Alexander the Great, was not followed at Rome, as it was considered unmanly; besides, such sleeves were worn by foreigners and barbarians, so naturally this mode was distasteful to the patriotic intolerance of a Roman citizen. The Greek " kolobus," called by the Romans the "colobium." Another name for this garment was the "tunica". When more than one was worn, the under ones were called the "tunica interior" or "subucula." A long tunica was called "tunica talaris." - Collar and Bodice types. Period Charles I to 1660
- Collar and Bodice types. Period Charles I
- Civil Costume about 1620
(From a contemporary broadside.) - Citizens Dress of 1545
Citizens Dress of 1545 - Citizen of Early tudor or Louis XI Period
Citizen of Early tudor or Louis XI Period - Charles I