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ESTABLISH HABITS OF CARRIAGE WHICH CREATE GOOD LINE

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CHAPTER V
ESTABLISH HABITS OF CARRIAGE WHICH CREATE GOOD
LINE
OMAN'S line is the result of her costume, in part only. Far more is
woman's costume affected by her line. By this we mean the line she
habitually falls into, the pose of torso, the line of her legs in action, and
when seated, her arms and hands in repose and gesture, the poise of her
head. It is woman's line resulting from her habit of mind and the control which her
mind has over her body, a thing quite apart from the way God made her, and the
expression her body would have had if left to itself, ungoverned by a mind stocked
with observations, conventions, experience and attitudes. We call this the physical
expression of woman's personality; this personality moulds her bodily lines and if
properly directed determines the character of the clothes she wears; determines also
whether she be a decorative object which says something in line and colour, or an
undecorative object which says nothing.
PLATE VIII
Queen Elizabeth in the absurdly elaborate
costume of the late Renaissance. Then
crinoline,
gaudy
materials,
and
ornamentations without meaning reached
their high-water mark in the costuming of
women.
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Metropolitan Museum of Art Tudor England
Portrait of Queen Elizabeth
Woman to be decorative, should train the carriage of her body from childhood, by
wearing appropriate clothing for various daily rôles. There is more in this than at
first appears. The criticism by foreigners that Americans, both men and women,
never appear really at home in evening clothes, that they look as if they felt
dressed, is true of the average man and woman of our country and results from the
lax standards of a new and composite social structure. America as a whole, lacks
traditions and still embodies the pioneer spirit, equally characteristic of Australia
and other offshoots from the old world.
The little American girl who is brought up from babyhood to change for the
evening, even though she have a nursery tea, and be allowed only a brief good-
night visit to the grown-ups, is still the exception rather than the rule. A wee
English maiden we know, created a good deal of amused comment because, on
several occasions, when passing rainy afternoons indoors, with some affluent little
New York friends, whose luxurious nurseries and marvellous mechanical toys were
a delight, always insisted upon returning home,--a block distant,--to change into
white before partaking of milk toast and jam, at the nursery table, the American
children keeping on their pink and blue linens of the afternoon. The fact of white or
pink is unimportant, but our point is made when we have said that the mother of the
American children constantly remarked on the unconscious grace of the English tot,
whether in her white muslin and pink ribbons, her riding clothes, or accordion-
plaited dancing frock. The English woman-child was acquiring decorative lines by
wearing the correct costume for each occasion, as naturally as a bird wears its
feathers. This is one way of obviating self-consciousness.