Victorian girls who attended school typically wore practical and modest clothing, which often included long skirts made of heavier fabrics rather than floral patterns. While some garments may have featured subtle prints, the emphasis was on functionality and adherence to social norms of decorum. Floral skirts were more commonly associated with informal or outdoor settings rather than formal school attire. Overall, Victorian schoolgirls' clothing was designed to be appropriate for their educational environment.
No. Girls in japan roll up their skirts on purpose to make them shorter. It actually against school rules. http://www.femaleontop.com/entertainment/japanese-school-mini-skirt.html
They're not allowed, but lots of girls wear shorts under their skirts.
They wore clothes if they could afford it
Poodle skirts were worn by teen age girls in the 1950s at dances. School uniforms for girls were pleated skirts, generally plaid or navy blue.
T-Shirts:Yellow/GoldPants:Black Or KhakiFor Girls :Skirts :The Yellow, & Black Plaided Skirts
No. Pants for girls are called pants. Skirts are not pants.
at the end of the Victorian period... but most women still wore skirts and wer considered week and fragile (which i tots disagree w/!)
girly girls like skirts so much because they think it looks hot on them so that way they wear it to school or wear boys hang out and they try to impress them with there legs
I think they're skirts.
To buy girls wool skirts, you can go to clothing stores such as GAP, Old Navy, J. Crew, etc. If available, you can search at Google for wool skirts for girls.
On Sunday, for mass, the girls wore silk or satin dresses and the boys wore tweed suits. On normal days, the boys would have worn cotton shirts and polyester trousers and girls wore skirts and blouses.
skirts