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Besides
the putty-coloured roadster lined
with scarlet, black lined
with russet
yellow,
orange lined with black;
there were limousines
painted a delicate
custard
colour,
with top and rim of wheels,
chassis and lamps of the
same Nattier Blue as
the
velvet lining, cushions and
curtains. A beautiful and
luxurious background and
how
easy to be decorative against it to one
who knows how!
Another
popular colour scheme was a
mauve body with top of
canopy and rims of
wheels
white, the entire lining of
mauve, like the body.
Imagine your woman with
a
decorative
instinct in this car. So
obvious an opportunity would
never escape her,
and
one can see the vision on a
Summer day, as she appears
in simple white,
softest
blue
or pale pink, or better still,
treating herself as a quaint nosegay of
blush roses,
for-get-me-nots,
lilies and mignonette, with
her chiffons and silks or
sheerest of
lawns.
"But
how about me?" one hears
from the girl of the open
car--a racer perhaps,
which
she drives herself. You are
easiest of all, we assure
you; to begin with,
your
car
being a racer, is painted
and lined with durable
dark colours--battleship
grey,
dust
colour, or some shade which
does not show dirt and
wear. The consequence
is,
you
will be decorative in any of the
smart coats, close hats and scarfs in
brilliant
and
lovely hues,--silk or
wool.
CHAPTER
XIV
HOW
TO GO ABOUT PLANNING A PERIOD
COSTUME
ERE
is a plan
to follow when getting up a
period costume:
We
will assume that you wish to
wear a Spanish dress of the
time of
Philip
IV (early seventeenth century).
The first thing to give
your
attention
to is the station in life
which you propose to represent.
Granted that you
decide
on a court costume, one of those made so
familiar by the paintings of
the
great
Velasquez, let your first
step be to get a definite
impression of the outline
of
such
a costume. Go to art galleries
and look at pictures, go to
libraries and ask for
books
on costumes, with plates.
You
will observe that under the
head of crinoline and
hoop-skirt periods, there
are a
variety
of outlines, markedly different.
The slope of the hip line
and the outline of
the
skirt is the infallible
hall-mark of each of these
periods.
Let
it be remembered that the outline of a
woman includes hair, combs,
head-dress,
earrings,
treatment of neck, shoulders,
arms, bust and hips; line to
the ankles and
shoes;
also fan, handkerchief or any
other article, which if a
silhouette were made,
would
appear. The next step is to
ascertain what materials were
available at the
time
your costume was worn and
what in vogue. Were velvets,
satins or silks worn,
or
all three? Were materials
flowered, striped, or plain? If
striped, horizontal or
perpendicular?
For these points turn again
to your art gallery, costume
plates, or the
best
of historical novels. If you
are unable to resort to the
sources suggested,
two
courses
lie open to you. Put the
matter into the hands of an
expert; there are
many
to
be approached through the columns of
first-class periodicals or newspapers
(we
do
not refer to the ordinary
dealer in costumes or theatre accessories); or make
the
effort
to consult some authority, in person or
by letter: an actor, historian
or
librarian.
It is amazing how near at hand
help often is, if we only
make our needs
known.
If the reader is young and
busy, dancing and skating and
sleeping, and
complains,
in her winsome way, that
"days are too short
for such work," we
would
remind
her that as already stated,
to carefully study the
details of any costume,
of
any
period, means that the
mind and the eye are being
trained to discriminate
between
the essentials and non-essentials of
woman's costume in every-day
life.
The
same young beauty may be
interested to know that at the
beginning of
Geraldine
Farrar's career the writer,
visiting with her, an
exhibition of pictures in
Munich,
was amazed at the then, very
young girl's familiarity
with the manner of
artists--ancient
and modern,--and exclaimed "I
did not know you
were so fond of
pictures."
"It's not that," Farrar
said, "I get my costumes from them, and a
great
many
of my poses."
PLATE
XVII
Portrait
of Mrs. Philip M. Lydig,
patron of the
arts,
exhibited in New York at
Duveen
Galleries
during Winter of 1916-1917
with
the
Zuloaga pictures. The
exhibition was
arranged
by Mrs. Lydig.
This
portrait has been chosen to
illustrate two
points:
that a distinguished decorative
quality
is
dependent upon line which
has primarily to
do
with form of one's own
physique (and not
alone
the cut of the costume); and
the great
value
of knowing one's own
type.
Mrs.
Lydig has been transferred
to the canvas
by
the clever technique of one of
the greatest
modern
painters, Ignacio Zuloaga, an
artistic
descendant
of Velasquez. The
delightful
movement
is that of the subject, in
this case
kept
alive through its subtle
translation into
terms
of art.
A
Portrait of Mrs. Philip M.
Lydig.
By
I. Zuloago
Outline
and material being decided, give
your attention to the
character of the
background
against which you are to
appear. If it is a ball-room, and the
occasion a
costume-ball,
is it done in light or dark colours, and
what is the prevailing
tone?
See
to it that you settle on a
colour which will be either a
harmonious note or an
agreeable,
hence impressive contrast, against the
prevailing background. If you
are
to
wear the costume on a stage
or as a living picture against a
background arranged
with
special reference to you, and where
you are the central
figure, be more
subtle
and
combine colours, if you
will; go in for interesting
detail, provided always
that
you
make these details have
meaning. For example, if it be
trimming, pure and
simple,
be sure that it be applied as during
your chosen period. Trimming can
be
used
so as to increase effectiveness of a
costume by accentuating its
distinctive
features,
and it can be misused so as to pervert
your period, whether that be
the age
of
Cleopatra, or the Winter of
1917. Details, such as lace,
jewels, head-dresses,
fans,
snuff-boxes, work baskets and
flowers must be absolutely of
the period, or not
at
all. A few details, even one
stunning jewel, if correct, will be
far more
convincing
than any number of
makeshifts, no matter how
attractive in themselves.
Paintings,
plates and history come to our rescue
here. If you think it dry
work, try
it.
The chances are all in
favour of your emerging from
your search spell-bound
by
the
vistas opened up to you; the
sudden meaning acquired by many
inanimate
things,
and a new pleasure added to all
observations.
That
Spanish comb of great-great-grandmother's is
really a treasure now.
The
antique
Spanish plaque you own,
found to be Moorish lustre,
and out of the attic
it
comes!
A Spanish miracle cross proves
the spiritual superstition of
the race, so
back
to the junk-shop you go,
hoping to acquire the one
that was proffered.
Yes,
Carmen should wear a long
skirt when she dances,
Spanish pictures show
them;
and so on.
The
collecting of materials and all
accessories to a costume, puts one in
touch, not
only
with the dress, but
the life of the period,
and the customs of the
times. Once
steeped
in the tradition of Spanish art
and artists, how quick
the connoisseur is to
recognize
Spanish influence on the art of
Holland, France and England. Lead
your
expert
in costumes of nations into talking of
history and we promise you
pictures of
dynasties
and lands that few
historical writers can match.
This man or woman
has
extracted
from the things people wore
the story of where they
wore them, and
when,
and how; for the lover of
colour we commend this
method of studying
history.
If
any one of our readers is
casting about for a hobby
and craves one with
inexhaustible
possibilities, we would advise:
try collecting data on periods in
dress,
as
shown in the art treasures of
the world, for of this
there is verily no
end.
We
warn the novice in advance
that each detail of woman's
dress has for one in
pursuit
of such data the allure of
the siren.
There
is the pictured story of
head-dresses and hats, and how the
hair is worn, from
Cleopatra's
time till ours; the
evolution of a woman's sleeve, its ups
and downs and
ins
and outs as shown in art;
the separation of the waist
from skirt, and ever
changing
line of both; the neck of
woman's gown so variously
cut and trimmed and
how
the necklace changed likewise to
accord; the passing of the
sandals of the
Greeks
into the poetic
glove-fitting slippers of
to-day.
One
sets out gaily to study
costumes, full of the courage of ignorance,
the joyous
optimism
of an enthusiast, because it is amusing
and looks so simple with all
the
material,--old
and new, lying about
one.
Ah,
that is the pitfall--the
very abundance of those plates in wondrous
books, old
coloured
prints and portraits of the
past. To some students this
kaleidoscopic vision
of
period costumes never falls
into definite lines and
colour; or if the types
are
clear,
what they come from or merge
into remains obscure.
For
the eager beginner we have
tried to evolve out of the
whole mass of data a
system
of origin and development as definite as
the anatomy of the human
body, a
framework
on which to build. If our
historical outline be clear
enough to impress
the
mental vision as indelibly as those
primary maps of the earth
did, then we feel
persuaded,
the textless books of wonderful and
beguiling costume plates will
serve
their
end as never before. We humbly
offer what we hope may prove
a key to the
rich
storehouse.
Simplicity,
and pure line, were lost
sight of when overabundance
dulled the senses
of
the world. We could prove
this, for art shows
that the costuming of
woman
developed
slowly, preserving, as did
furniture, the same classic
lines and general
characteristics
until the fifteenth century,
the end of the Middle
Ages.
With
the opening up of trade channels and
the possibilities of easy and
quick
communication
between countries we find, as we
did in the case of
furniture,
periods
of fashion developing without
nationality. Nations declared themselves
in
the
artistry of workmanship, as to-day, and
in the modification and exaggeration
of
an
essential detail, resulting from
national or individual
temperament.
If
you ask, "Where do fashions
come from,--why 'periods'?" we would
answer that
in
the last analysis one would
probably find in the
conception of every
fashion
some
artist's brain. If the
period is a good one, then it
proves that fate allowed
the
artist
to be true to his muse. If the
fashion is a bad one the
artist may have had
to
adapt
his lines and colour or
detail to hide a royal
deformity, or to cater to the
whim
of
some wilful beauty ignorant
of our art, but rich
and in the public
eye.
A
fashion if started is a demon or a god
let loose. As we have said,
there is an
interesting
point to be observed in looking at woman
as decoration; whether
the
medium
be fresco, bas relief,
sculpture, mosaic, stained glass or
painting, the
decorative
line, shown in costumes, presents
the same recurrent types
that we found
when
studying the history of
furniture.
For
our present purposes it is expedient to
confine ourselves to the
observation of
that
expression of civilisation which had
root, so far as we know, in
Assyria and
Egypt,
and spread like a branching
vine through Byzantium, Greece,
Rome, Gothic
Europe
and Europe of the Renaissance, on
through the seventeenth,
eighteenth and
nineteenth
centuries, down to the present
time.
Costumes
for woman and man are
supposed to have had their
origin in a cord tied
about
the waist, from which was
suspended crude implements (used
for the slaying
of
beasts for food, and in
self-defence); trophies of war,
such as teeth, scalps,
etc.
The
trophies suspended, partly concealed
the body and were for
decoration, as was
tattooing
of the skin. Clothes were
not the result of modesty;
modesty followed the
partial
covering of the human body.
Modesty, or shame, was the
emotion which
developed
when man, accustomed to
decoration--trophies or
tattooing--was
deprived
of all or part of such
covering. What parts of the
body require
concealment,
is purely a matter of the
customs prevailing with a
race or tribe, at a
certain
time, and under certain
conditions.
PLATE
XVIII
Mrs.
Langtry (Lady de Bathe) who
has been
one
of the greatest beauties of
modern times
and
a marked example of a woman
who has
always
understood her own type, to
costume
it.
She
agrees that this photograph
of her, in an
evening
wrap, illustrates a point
she has
always
laid emphasis on: that a
garment
which
has good lines--in which one is
a
picture--continues
wearable even when
not
the
dernier cri of
fashion.
This
wrap was worn by Mrs.
Langtry about
two
years ago.
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