- A game of Emigrette
- A Niam-niam girl
The social position of the Niam-niam women differ materially from what is found amongst other negroes in Africa. The Bongo and Mittoo women are on the same familiar terms with the foreigner as the men, and the Monbuttoo ladies are as forward , inquisitive and prying as can be imagined; but the women of the Niam-niam treat every stranger with marked reserve. Whenever I met any women coming along a narrow pathway in the woods or on the steppe, I noticed that they always made a wide circuit to avoid me, and returned into the path further on; and many a time I saw them waiting at a distance with averted face until I had passed by. - An appointment at the Cafe des Tuileries
- An official ball in the Strassbourg Theatre
- Appropriate School Dresses
- Ball Costume 1825
Ball Costume 1825 - Bathing costume, from The Delineator, July 1884
- Bathing costumes from a supplement to The Tailor’s Review, July 1895
- bonnets worn in 1830
bonnets worn in England in 1830 - Botocudo Indian with Lip-plug
Many of these wild tribes delight in bright feathers. They make necklaces, head-dresses, arm-rings, bracelets, leg-bands, aprons, and capes from them. Not that a single tribe makes all of these many ornaments; some will use the feathers in one way, others in another. Among the tribes of Brazil, the Botocudo are famous for the ornaments they wear in their lips and ears. These ornaments are mere disks or plugs of wood, which are inserted in holes pierced in the ears and lower lip. Some Botocudo lip plugs are three inches in diameter. Such a lip ornament holds the lip out almost like a shelf. - Choice of fabric
Here a small all-over pattern minimizes size, the plaits and tassels lengthen, the necklace adds a slenderizing touch. The appearance as a whole is graceful and youthful. - 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 of 1390
Court Dress of 1390 - Court Dress of tudor or Louis XI Period
Court Dress of tudor or Louis XI Period - Crinoline
- Days of the pannier
Days of the pannier - different modes of dressing the hair.in 1835
different modes of dressing the hair.in 1835 - different styles of hair-dressing fashionable in 1830-31
different styles of hair-dressing fashionable in 1830-31 - Early days of the crinoline - 1855
Early days of the crinoline - 1855 - Early Victorian
- 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 - English dress fashions worn in 1830
English dress fashions worn in 1830 Two walking dresses, one evening, and one ball dress. - English Fashion - 1830-1831
English Fashion - bonnet, hat, turban, and caps, as worn during the year 1830-1831 - English Fashions 1832
a dinner, two ball, and a walking dress 1832 - Envelope and knickerbocker chemise
- Fashion 1920's
Fashion 1920's - Fashion 1920's
Fashion 1920's - Fashion 1920's
Fashion 1920's - Fashion 1920's
Fashion 1920's - Fashion 1920's
Fashion 1920's - Fashionable ladies - 1920's
- Fashionable lady 1920's
Fashionable lady 1920's - Fashions for April 1841
Fashions for April 1841 - Fashions for March 1841
Fashions for March 1841 - French Restoration period - 1823
French Restoration period - 1823 - Good lines for stout figures
- hair dressing which were in vogue in 1832
hair styles which were in vogue in 1832 - Hair fashions 1834 England
Hair fashions 1834 England - Hairstyles for 1837
Hairstyles for 1837 - Hats 1
These two examples show how even a hat with drooping brim, if not too wide, can be worn by the stout person if trimming is adeptly used to direct the vision upward and lend an illusion of height. - Hats 2
Here trimming is used on two entirely different types of hats to give in each case added height to the figure and help in attaining a slenderizing appearance. Left—Hats with medium brims and high trimming are often becoming, especially if wide enough to avoid the pyramid effect. Right—High built trimming and delicate veils are advantageous where a double chin is the handicap. - Henry IV or early Stuart - 1600 - 1615
Henry IV or early Stuart - 1600 - 1615 - Horizontal Chignon
It requires from twenty-five to thirty years for an Ishogo woman to be able to build upon her head one of their grotesque head-dresses. The accompanying picture will show you how they look. But you will ask how they can arrange hair in such a manner. I will tell you : A frame is made, and the hair is worked upon it ; but if there is no frame, then they use grass-cloth, or any other stuffing, and give the shape they wish to the head-dress. A well-known hair-dresser, who, by the way, is always a female, is a great person in an Ishogo village, and is kept pretty busy from morning till after-noon. It takes much time to work up the long wool on these negroes' heads, but, when one of these heads of hair, or chignons, is made, it lasts for a long time—sometimes for two or three months—without requiring repair. I need not tell you that after a few weeks the head gets filled with specimens of natural history. A great quantity of palm oil is used in dressing the hair, and, as the natives never wash their heads, the odor is not pleasant. When a woman comes out with a newly-made chignon, the little Ishogo girls exclaim, "When shall I be old enough to wear one of these? How beautiful they are!" Every morning, instead of taking a bath, the Ishogos rub themselves with oil, mixed with a red dye made from the wood of a forest tree. - How she came out
- How she went in
- In the Garden of the Tuileries
- Inverted Maidehair
- Japanese Hairstyles
Troublesome as was the man’s queue in the old days, it was a trifle compared with the woman’s coiffure. In the early days of the present regime when men began to cut their hair, many women followed suit and cropped theirs as short. The government, however, interfered and prohibited the cutting of the hair by women other than widows and grandames with whom it was a time-honoured custom. In 1887 when the pro-European craze was at its height, many women tied their hair in European style; but it was subsequently abandoned by those who found that by tying the hair in this manner, they spoilt it for the Japanese coiffure; for having been accustomed to oil it well for their native style, they discovered that the hair, when bound without any pomade, became very brittle and snapped short. Still, the European style is now largely adopted because it does not require expert assistance and the services of the professional hair-dresser can be dispensed with. Various styles are in vogue. Soon after the fall of Port Arthur in 1905, a high knot came into fashion under the formidable title of “203-metre hill knot,” in celebration of the capture of that famous hill which was practically the key to the great fortress. The favourite at present with our women is a low pompadour known as the “penthouse style.” But though the European way of dressing the hair has become very popular, it is not likely so long as the kimono remains unchanged that the Japanese coiffure, awkward as it is compared with the European, will be entirely superseded by the other. - Lady in house-robe. Period, 1816
Lady in house-robe. Period, 1816 - Lady in scarf and hat
Lady in scarf and hat - Late Empire - Ball dress and street costume
Late Empire - Ball dress and street costume - Louis XIII - about 1640
Louis XIII - about 1640 - Louis XIV Period - about 1700
Louis XIV Period - about 1700 - Louis XV
Dress in the time of Louis XV