- Costume notes, 1811-1812
- Costume notes, 1814-1816
- Costume notes. Period 1670-1690
- Costume of a Lawyer
(From a broadside, dated 1623.) - Costume of Manservant - reign of Louis XIII
Costume of Manservant - reign of Louis XIII - Costume of Shepherds in the Twelfth Century
- Costume of the Franks in the Eighth Century
Costume of the Franks in the Eighth Century - Costume type. 1695-1710
- Costume types. Period Charles II
- Costumes Fifteenth century, 2nd half
- Costumes, 1554-1568
- Costumes, 1554-1580
- Costumes, 1568-1610
- Costumes, 1570-1605
- Costumes. Period James I
- Costumes. Period, James I
- Court costume Louis XVI - about 1780
Court costume Louis XVI - about 1780 - Court Dress - Early 15th Century
Court Dress - Early 15th Century - Court Dress - Latter part of 13th Century
Court Dress - Latter part of 13th Century - Court Dress 1540 - Tudor or Francis I
Court Dress 1540 - Tudor or Francis I - Court Dress 1550 - Tudor or Francis I
Court Dress 1550 - Tudor or Francis I - Court Dress of 1390
Court Dress of 1390 - Court Dress of tudor or Louis XI Period
Court Dress of tudor or Louis XI Period - Danes, Scandinavians and Gauls
- Days of the pannier
Days of the pannier - Details of female fashion 1820 - 1828
- Dress of Ladies of Quality
(From Sandford's 'Coronation Procession of James II.') - Early days of the crinoline - 1855
Early days of the crinoline - 1855 - Ecclesiastical Costume in the Twelfth Century
- Egyptian
- Egyptian
- Egyptian Female Costume
Egyptian Female Costume - Egyptian king
Egyptian king - Egyptian Queen
Egyptian queen - Elizabethan modes
- Elizabethan or Henry III - 1570
Elizabethan or Henry III - 1570 - Elizabethan or Henry III Period - showing Medicis Collar
Elizabethan or Henry III Period - showing Medicis Collar - Elizabethan or Marie Stuart Period - 1558 - 1600
Elizabethan or Marie Stuart Period - 1558 - 1600 - End of fifteenth century
- Ethiopian Noble Lady
- Evening dress of Directoire and early first Empire 1798 - 1804
Evening dress of Directoire and early first Empire 1798 - 1804 - 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. - Female - End of fifteenth century
- Female - Period 1625-1660
- Female - Fifteenth century, 2nd half
- Female - Period Henry VIII
- Female Costume Fifteenth century, 1st half
- Female Costume - Fifteenth century, 1st half
- Female Costume - Fifteenth century, 2nd half
- Female Elizabethan modes
- Fifteenth century
- Fifteenth century, 1st half
- Fifteenth century, 2nd half
- Fifteenth-century Shoes and Clogs
- Fish-girl of Scheveningen, Holland
The fishing towns of Holland are interesting. Every traveller wants to see Vollendam and Scheveningen and the hamlets on the Island of Marken. The men and women in these towns are kind-hearted, simple people, who are proud of their own village and think their own dress finer than that of other towns. Each of these fishing villages has its characteristic costume. The men of the Island of Marken wear a close-fitting jacket which ends at the waist and great, baggy, knee pants. Marken women wear round, white caps, fitting the head closely, with an open-work border, and a bright waist, with striped sleeves, over the front of which is a square of handsomely embroidered cloth. Little girls all through Holland dress exactly like women. But for her child face you would take the little girl from Scheveningen to be a grown person. She wears a dainty white cap pinned on with two great round-headed pins. Her ample dress quite reaches the ground; her white apron is neatly tied, and her purple shawl, tightly wrapped about her shoulders, is demurely crossed, and the ends are tucked under her apron strings. She wears the common wooden shoes of the country - Footwear, 1510-1540
- Fourteenth century
- Fourteenth century, 1st half
- Fourteenth century, 2nd half
- Francs and Anglo-Saxons