Shakespeare fashion was leotards , tights and the big frilly collar type things if you know what i mean !? ;-)
They were castoffs from the nobility--clothes which had become out of fashion or worn.
What kind of fashion are you talking about? If you mean clothes, do a Google image search on "Elizabethan costume". But there are other kinds of fashions. Smoking came into fashion in Shakespeare's time. for example.
Your best bet here is to check out the pictures in the Wikipedia articles on "1550-1600 in Western European fashion" and "1600-1650 in Western European fashion"
The easiest way to find this out is to look at pictures of people from that time. You can Google images of people of the era. Or you can check out the really excellent Wikipedia articles "1550-1600 in fashion" and "1600-1650 in fashion". Shakespeare, of course wore his hair with great difficulty on account of being bald.
Her fashion is mostly influenced from the Victorian Era (corset, stockings, etc.) and her music is labeled as 'Victoriandustrial' She uses a lot of references to Shakespeare in her songs, songs from Opheliac refer mostly to Hamlet.
Abhor mean to regard with disgust or hatred. It meant the same thing to Shakespeare, who was of course writing in the same language. E.g. in Twelfth Night, Maria says, "he will come to her in yellow stockings, and 'tis a colour she abhors, and cross-gartered, a fashion she detests"
The changing seasons gave them greens, roots, herbs, fruits, and nuts, many of which were gathered in hedgerows, fields, and forests, as well as in kitchen gardens.
green orange pink purple whatever rockstar celeb Shakespeare vampire royalty craziest and some new one (not sure where that one is)
Barbers in Shakespeare's time typically used simple tools like scissors and razors to cut hair. They might have also employed shears, which were larger and more suited for cutting thicker hair. The process often involved shaping the hair according to the fashion of the day, which varied throughout Shakespeare's life. Overall, the tools were basic yet effective for grooming.
Innyards made natural theatres. Indeed so common was the fashion of performing in innyards that theatres like the Globe based their design on them.
Yes! Shakespeare's name was really Shakespeare. His whole name was William Shakespeare.
John Shakespeare (father) Mary (Arden) Shakespeare (mother) Anne (Hathaway) Shakespeare (wife) Susanna (Shakespeare) Hall (daughter) Hamnet Shakespeare (son - twin) Judith (Shakespeare) Quiney (daughter - twin) Joan (Shakespeare) Hart (sister) Gilbert Shakespeare, Richard Shakespeare, Edmund Shakespeare (brothers)