There were no sewing machines until towards the end of the Victorian era; no mass-production techniques, no way at all of making cheap clothes. If you were rich, you had a tailor make you a suit, or a frock, or whatever; and this you wore until it was beginning to show the dirt, at which stage it would be discarded because, of course, fine outer garments could not be washed without spoiling them.
Shirts and shifts and chemises and other unmentionables, of course, could be washed, and were; so they could be worn until they showed signs of wear, and then discarded.
The discarded clothes were usually given to the servants, who would wear them until they reached the next stage of decay and then - this is the important bit - sell them. Good second-hand clothes commanded quite high prices - remember Fagin's boys picking pockets and risking the gallows just for handkerchieves - and would be worn with a certain amount of pride by the better-off of the working class. Then they would go back to the old-clothes shop and gradually work their way down the social scale. A street urchin would wear clothes which had got to the stage of possessing no value at all.
Old trousers, then; an old coat, usually too big, because clothes made expressly for children would be passed down within families rather than placed on the open market; some sort of shirt. If shoes )which were rare), then certainly no socks; in winter the feet would be wrapped in rags, which also served to make the ninth-hand shoes fit small feet. No underwear. The clothes not washed except by the rain, and worn until they literally fell to pieces, when they were - not discarded, but made up into bundles to be sold to the shoddy-merchant. The shoddy mill would turn old woollens into felt, old cotton and linen into paper
Our modern ideas of recycling are pitiful compared to Victorian p;ractices!
yes it is used by rich and poor children from the Victorian times
The Victorian poor school children had Rat's vegetables,apple if lucky and other horrible food.
Children living in Britain during Victorian times, were either rich or poor. If they were poor, they often had to work to help out the family.
Bread and water
poor children wore simple and rather uncomfortable clothes that would hurt and be really dull!!!
yes it is used by rich and poor children from the Victorian times
Rich Victorian children often had an opportunity not afforded to poor children. They often received an education while poor children worked in the factories.
schools because rich Victorian children were more likely to get in than the poor but some poor got into schools anyway
they worked- poor children went to school- rich children
The Victorian poor school children had Rat's vegetables,apple if lucky and other horrible food.
chimney sweeper
no or yes
work in a workhouse's
poor
Children living in Britain during Victorian times, were either rich or poor. If they were poor, they often had to work to help out the family.
yes they did but not in as harsh condisions as the poor children
The poor children in Victorian times did not have many types of food to eat. They mostly age stale bread, potato peelings, and scraps.