Necklace
1870
Sotheby’s
Necklace
1870
Sotheby’s
Ensemble
Lucile, 1913
The Victoria & Albert Museum
Dresses
Yves Saint Laurent, 1970s
Whitaker Auctions

Dress
1970s
1stdibs.com
Dress
1805-1810
Les Arts Décoratifs
“Fast forward a few more years and the intellectual movement that came to be known as the Enlightenment brought with it a new respect for the rational and useful and an emphasis on education rather than privilege. Men’s fashion shifted towards more practical clothing. In England, aristocrats began to wear simplified clothes that were linked to their work managing country estates.
It was the beginning of what has been called the Great Male Renunciation, which would see men abandon the wearing of jewellery, bright colours and ostentatious fabrics in favour of a dark, more sober, and homogeneous look. Men’s clothing no longer operated so clearly as a signifier of social class, but while these boundaries were being blurred, the differences between the sexes became more pronounced.
“There begins a discussion about how men, regardless of station, of birth, if educated could become citizens,” says Semmelhack.
“Women, in contrast, were seen as emotional, sentimental and uneducatable. Female desirability begins to be constructed in terms of irrational fashion and the high heel - once separated from its original function of horseback riding - becomes a primary example of impractical dress.”“
Garter Belt
1950s
The Goldstein Museum of Design
Stockings
1860s
The Victoria & Albert Museum
Suit
1865-1870
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Union Army Uniform
1863
The Metropolitan Museum of Art