Tumgik
#breeches
hollyjumper · 3 days
Text
Tumblr media
20 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Sailor's Slops
1600s-1700s
Extremely rare survival of a shirt and breeches, called slops, as worn by sailors from the late 16th through to the 18th centuries. This unique set of loose, practical sailor’s clothing reveals life aboard ship. They are made of very strong linen to endure the hard, rough work. There is tar across the front from hauling ropes. The breeches are heavily mended and patched, which the sailor would have done himself.
The Museum of London (ID: 53.101/1b)
1K notes · View notes
history-of-fashion · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media
1790-1810 Habit à la française by unknown maker
silk, velvet, satin
(Amsterdam Museum)
1K notes · View notes
dooneysworld · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media
759 notes · View notes
daddydicktampa · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media
307 notes · View notes
atlas-prime · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
New breeches!
199 notes · View notes
vincentbriggs · 10 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
These yellow silk breeches were technically my last project of 2022, but as soon as I finished them I realized I'd made the fall a couple centimetres too high and I needed to shorten it and redo the buttonholes on the corners.
It was an easy alteration that only took a few hours, so naturally I put it off for 6 months.
I still need to make a couple of minor changes to my pattern to make it more accurate to late 18th century breeches, but I changed some stuff before sewing this version up, so it's much closer than it was before.
616 notes · View notes
Text
Love when MtG characters go to a different plane and play dress up.
Like, they didn't have to wear cowboy clothes on Thunder Junction, but everyone did.
Very cool of the necromancers (2), assassin, demon lord, witch, pirates (2), and little skeleton guy to get all gussied up even on a plane that has only know extraplanar beings
The plane was uninhabited not that long ago, there's no need to hide that you're from somewhere else, it's all for the fashion and flavor and it's great
72 notes · View notes
hollyjumper · 2 days
Text
Tumblr media
19 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Doublet & Breeches
1630s
Italy (Fabric); England (Constructed)
Object Type This ensemble of doublet and breeches is typical of a wealthy man's clothing. It would have been worn with a matching or contrasting cloak. A fine lace or linen collar and cuffs would have completed the outfit, along with silk stockings and heeled leather shoes. Time The style of this outfit is characteristic of the 1630s. The breeches are longer and less voluminous than they were in the early 17th century. They are attached with long heavy hooks which run through eyelets at the waistband on the inside of the doublet. The silk ribbons at the waistband once had the function of holding doublet and breeches together, but are now purely decorative. On the doublet the waist tabs are now much larger and longer than they had been 20 years previously. Materials & Making The lustrous white satin was a suitable fabric for stamping and pinking. The fabric was probably dampened first and the stamping tools heated to make the impression indelible. In between the stamped motifs, a pinking tool similar to an awl created the tiny decorative holes. Once the satin was decorated, it was cut and hand-sewn. The doublet and breeches are interlined with wool and lined with silk.
The Victoria & Albert (Accession number: 348&A-1905)
247 notes · View notes
history-of-fashion · 11 days
Text
Tumblr media
ab. 1785 Suit (coat, waistcoat, breeches) (France)
silk velvet, silk satin, silver colored metal thread, silk
(Kunstgewerbemuseum Berlin)
782 notes · View notes
emlan · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media
Might as well post the puppet undress homework I did in case someone else was also wondering how P most likely fastens his more old timey stockings... Though, I guess normal elastics aren't too far off from the game's era so it's fine to cheat a bit with normal Programming Socks
69 notes · View notes
suburbanswirl · 7 days
Text
I love this vinyl raincoat; wear it often.
Vinyl raincoat by Venus, turtleneck sweater by Body C, jodhpurs by Kerrits, fingerless leather opera gloves by RZ Bohemia, and rubber rain boots by Hunter.
181 notes · View notes
digitalfashionmuseum · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media
Red silk doublet and breeches, 1562, Italian.
Worn by Garzia de Medici.
Uffizi Gallery.
66 notes · View notes
jasper-the-menace · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media
If not, he would—what? Keep going, he supposed. Beg a boat from the next port he reached. Fly to a Sun Empire village. Wander back to Orazca and pretend the plane wasn't falling apart again. But he wouldn't stop, not now, maybe not ever. If he did, the fungus would catch up. - The Lost Caverns of Ixalan episode 6, by Valerie Valdes
A wonderful commission done for me by my sweet mutual @hamingo of my boys Malcolm and Breeches from Magic: The Gathering. The Lost Caverns of Ixalan story really was these two having the worst fucking day of their lives. Breeches is just coping with it a lot better than Malcolm is.
51 notes · View notes
clove-pinks · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Royal Naval uniform: pattern 1836.
White cotton twill trousers with a satin finish. Fall-front with four metal button fastenings, worn by Lieutenant Horatio James (died 1850), later Commander. The flap fastens with two additional buttons. There is a fob pocket in the waistband. The pocket flaps also fasten with metal buttons, but are separate from the flap. There are four buttons along the top for braces. At the back there is one button on either side of the gusset to secure braces. The central back gusset also had two eyelets on either side with cotton tape to adjust the fit. (NMM).
King George IV died on 26th June 1830. A fortnight later his brother, William IV, ordered that the collars and cuffs of the dress coats of [Royal Navy] commissioned officers should be changed from white to scarlet, that three buttons should be placed under each of the pocket flaps, and that no gold lace should be worn on the trousers. His Majesty also gave breeches a final kick in the seat by decreeing that they should no longer be worn at king's or queen's drawing-rooms. Thus they made their exit from the naval officer's wardrobe.
[...] Trousers, however, remained problem garments. 'Doubts appearing to be entertained' as to when to wear white and when to wear blue, His Majesty was 'graciously pleased to command' that on all occasions of full dress officers should wear white trousers between 1st May and 14th October and blue trousers between 15th October and 30th April. In undress the decision was left to to the weather and the officer concerned, as it had been in the past.
— Dudley Jarrett, British Naval Dress
155 notes · View notes