Men's Fashion Illustrations from the Turn of the Century (Dover Fashion and Costumes)

Men's Fashion Illustrations from the Turn of the Century (Dover Fashion and Costumes)

Language: English

Pages: 103

ISBN: 0486263533

Format: PDF / Kindle (mobi) / ePub


Over 100 full-page, royalty-free illustrations document what well-dressed American men wore in early 1900s: checked and striped business suits, sporty knickers and jackets, elegant formal wear, long fur-trimmed coats, and more. Includes variety of accessories: canes, gloves, spats. Images have been selected from rare issues of The Sartorial Art Journal, published between 1900 and 1910.

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than ten in the same publication or project. (For permission for additional use, please write to Dover Publications, Inc., 31 East 2nd Street, Mineola, N.Y. 11501.) However, republication or reproduction of any illustration by any other graphic service whether it be in a book or in any other design resource is strictly prohibited. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Men’s fashion illustrations from the turn of the century. (Dover pictorial archive series) Reprint.

than ten in the same publication or project. (For permission for additional use, please write to Dover Publications, Inc., 31 East 2nd Street, Mineola, N.Y. 11501.) However, republication or reproduction of any illustration by any other graphic service whether it be in a book or in any other design resource is strictly prohibited. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Men’s fashion illustrations from the turn of the century. (Dover pictorial archive series) Reprint.

for our subscribers, and that no excellence we attain in our work is unappreciated by them, and knowing that nothing contributes more to our own satisfaction than to surpass our best previous efforts, especially in the art direction, we make a new departure this month in fashion reporting. The Sartorial Art Journal, July 1903 This enthusiastic statement captures the buoyant pride of the journal, a trade magazine serving the Merchant Tailors’ National Protective Association specifically and

years the selection is based on both repetition and novelty, for we hope to show the continuity of Edwardian male dress as well as examples of variations in cut and accessories as they were published. One example of continuity is the short topcoat worn by the figure at the right in Plate A of May 1900 (p. 9). In October 1901 (p. 27), the same coat is described as a “Street Covert. The material represented is a covert coating. The average length is 34 inches.” It appears again in October 1902 (p.

(0-486-42323-9) 60 CIVIL WAR-ERA FASHION PATTERNS, Kristina Seleshanko. (0-486-46176-9) THE MODE IN HATS AND HEADDRESS: A HISTORICAL SURVEY WITH 198 PLATES, R. Turner Wilcox. (0-486-46762-7) THE MODE IN FOOTWEAR: A HISTORICAL SURVEY WITH 53 PLATES, R. Turner Wilcox. (0-486-46761-9) THE MODE IN COSTUME: A HISTORICAL SURVEY WITH 202 PLATES, R. Turner Wilcox. (0-486-46820-8) EVERYDAY DRESS OF RURAL AMERICA, 1783-1800: WITH INSTRUCTIONS AND PATTERNS, Merideth Wright. (0-486-27320-2) See every

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