The beginning of the suit, as we know it, usually worn with a hat and waistcoat.
Shirts would have detachable stiff collars, sometimes in the wing-collar fashion.
Women always wore long dresses, sometimes in the wide hooped style (requiring help from a dresser), and always modestly covered.
Poor Victorian people wore rags and clothes that had been thrown out by rich people. They had tatty clothes.
Girls wore a dress with a pinafore over the top and a white cap. Boys wore shirts and a pair of shorts and a cap as well
Pants, jacket, waste coat, shirt and flat caps (men) shawls (women). They also wore wooden clogs
ragged clothes
this is because they wanted to look slim so they could wear tight dresses
In the Victorian workhouse times the poor people had to wear a uniform so the outside knew they were poor and knew they were from the workhouse.
suits
rags
Victorian street sweepers typically wore a long coat or jacket, trousers, a flat cap, and sturdy boots or shoes to protect them while working outdoors. They might also wear gloves to protect their hands while cleaning the streets.
bra and thongs
ragged clothes
They were all in victorian attire
this is because they wanted to look slim so they could wear tight dresses
In the Victorian workhouse times the poor people had to wear a uniform so the outside knew they were poor and knew they were from the workhouse.
Victorian people dressed appropiatley to their age,and position to society.
Up until the nineteenth century, actors wore whatever people of the time wore, suitable to the class of the character. Thus the actor playing Bottom, a working class guy, wore sixteenth-century working class clothes in the sixteenth century, seventeenth century working class clothes in the seventeenth century, and eighteenth century working class clothes in the eighteenth. In the nineteenth century, producers became preoccupied with the "period of the play", a precise historical period in which the play was supposed to take place. Thus they decided that Bottom was a working class guy in Ancient Greece and should wear Ancient Greek clothes. Since the 1960s, however, directors have increasingly viewed period as a flexible concept, so Bottom might wear twentieth-century American working class clothes, or eighteenth-century French working class clothes, or medieval Japanese working class clothes, depending which style suits the impression the director is trying to make.
Upper and middle class Victorian ladies were certainly expected to wear corsets, (going without a corset would have been like going without a bra today) and working class women had cheaper, less rigidly boned alternatives. The fashion of tightlacing - wearing a corset with the smallest waist possible - was only practiced by a minority of ladies and contrary to popular belief was not a widespread practice. For most women, the corset was worn for good posture rather than to achieve a smaller waistline.
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clothes