How to Read a Dress: A Guide to Changing Fashion from the 16th to the 21st Century
Autor Lydia Edwardsen Limba Engleză Hardback – 17 noi 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350172227
ISBN-10: 1350172227
Pagini: 280
Ilustrații: 225 color illus
Dimensiuni: 189 x 246 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.97 kg
Ediția:Revizuită
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350172227
Pagini: 280
Ilustrații: 225 color illus
Dimensiuni: 189 x 246 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.97 kg
Ediția:Revizuită
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Illustrated
with
annotated
color
images
throughout,
this
visual
guide
explains
how
dress
styles
changed
from
1550
to
2020
Notă biografică
Lydia
Edwardsis
a
lecturer
at
Edith
Cowan
University,
Perth,
Australia
and
author
of
the
companion
book,How
to
Read
a
Suit(Bloomsbury
2020).
Cuprins
AcknowledgementsPrefaceIntroduction
1.
1550
-
1600
2.
1600
-
16993.
1710
-
17904.
1790
-
18375.
1837
-
18696.
1870
-
1889
7.
1890
-
19168.
1918
-
19299.
1930
-
194610.
1947
-
195911.
1960
-
197912.
1980
-
2020Glossary
of
TermsNotesBibliographyPhotographic
CreditsIndexList
of
Fashion
Designers
Recenzii
This
comprehensive,
inclusive
and
updated
guide
to
dress
history
is
richly
illustrated
in
full
colour
and
is
supplemented
with
detailed
annotations
that
identify
the
key
stylistic
trends
from
1550
to
2020
-
making
it
an
essential
text
for
the
novice
fashion
historian.
Fashion lovers, students, and historians alike are all indebted to Edwards for teaching us how to interpret the meanings inscribed in the very clothes we wear and have worn for centuries. This new edition brings us into the 21st century with a potent reminder that not only can we all read a dress - we can all wear one too!
This updated and expanded edition is an invaluable resource in any costume history library. Dr. Lydia Edwards brings to life the evolution of the changing fashions, technological developments, and the social and material culture of the different decades.
For a knowledgeable introduction that has plenty of eye candy alongside its scholarship, Lydia Edwards'How to Read a Dresshits the spot.The curated collection, featuring everything from funeral finery to department-store finds, offers [a...] fascinating fashion primer that invites you to make connections across centuries, to wonder about the ways huge social shifts are reflected in everyday life, and tips you off about the placement of shoulder seams. Whether you're a costume nerd or just casually curious,How to Read a Dresswill give you some insights into the language of dress.
The general principle of this book is excellent and provides a much-needed overview ... [It] is a perfect introduction to the world of dress history and provides a good stimulus for further study. For those with specialist knowledge of particular periods, it provides a quick and easily accessed reference for the main points of other periods.
This original, accessible take on fashion history is packed with color images, and each example garment annotated with terminology, key elements of the shape and construction, and other details of note.
Those looking for a detailed, object centered and carefully researched study of historic dress will find a satisfying, richly illustrated guide for looking at clothes.
Lydia Edwards'sHow to Read a Dressis a detailed, practical, and totally beautiful guide to the history of this particular form of clothing from the 16th to the 20th centuries.
Ultimately, this is an excellent book for scholars of fashion history, costume designers and makers, and really anyone looking to improve their ability to determine the period of a given dress.
This is a beautiful, well-written book. The photos are a joy to study, and I finished it wishing it were twice as long.
Sashays down the historical catwalk, examining women's costume from the 16th to the 20th century . It is fascinating to rifle through this pictorial dress-up box and see styles come and go, and then imagine what you might like to wear.
Using examples from lesser known international collections, this well-illustrated and informative book tracks the evolution of the dress through expert analysis and description. It will be an invaluable guide for anyone with an interest in dating and contextualizing the dress as a garment within the culture of fashion.
This appealing and accessible work offers a fresh perspective on fashion history from 1550 to 1970. Images of surviving garments from museums in Australia, Canada, Europe and the United States of America have been annotated to highlight and elucidate key fashionable details. This book would make an excellent companion toThe Dress Detective.
This book explores the realities of what we can and cannot know about a garment, particularly in terms of the why and when of its creation. The author's concept of the fluidity of time is critical to our better understanding of how individuals approach dress.
Fashion lovers, students, and historians alike are all indebted to Edwards for teaching us how to interpret the meanings inscribed in the very clothes we wear and have worn for centuries. This new edition brings us into the 21st century with a potent reminder that not only can we all read a dress - we can all wear one too!
This updated and expanded edition is an invaluable resource in any costume history library. Dr. Lydia Edwards brings to life the evolution of the changing fashions, technological developments, and the social and material culture of the different decades.
For a knowledgeable introduction that has plenty of eye candy alongside its scholarship, Lydia Edwards'How to Read a Dresshits the spot.The curated collection, featuring everything from funeral finery to department-store finds, offers [a...] fascinating fashion primer that invites you to make connections across centuries, to wonder about the ways huge social shifts are reflected in everyday life, and tips you off about the placement of shoulder seams. Whether you're a costume nerd or just casually curious,How to Read a Dresswill give you some insights into the language of dress.
The general principle of this book is excellent and provides a much-needed overview ... [It] is a perfect introduction to the world of dress history and provides a good stimulus for further study. For those with specialist knowledge of particular periods, it provides a quick and easily accessed reference for the main points of other periods.
This original, accessible take on fashion history is packed with color images, and each example garment annotated with terminology, key elements of the shape and construction, and other details of note.
Those looking for a detailed, object centered and carefully researched study of historic dress will find a satisfying, richly illustrated guide for looking at clothes.
Lydia Edwards'sHow to Read a Dressis a detailed, practical, and totally beautiful guide to the history of this particular form of clothing from the 16th to the 20th centuries.
Ultimately, this is an excellent book for scholars of fashion history, costume designers and makers, and really anyone looking to improve their ability to determine the period of a given dress.
This is a beautiful, well-written book. The photos are a joy to study, and I finished it wishing it were twice as long.
Sashays down the historical catwalk, examining women's costume from the 16th to the 20th century . It is fascinating to rifle through this pictorial dress-up box and see styles come and go, and then imagine what you might like to wear.
Using examples from lesser known international collections, this well-illustrated and informative book tracks the evolution of the dress through expert analysis and description. It will be an invaluable guide for anyone with an interest in dating and contextualizing the dress as a garment within the culture of fashion.
This appealing and accessible work offers a fresh perspective on fashion history from 1550 to 1970. Images of surviving garments from museums in Australia, Canada, Europe and the United States of America have been annotated to highlight and elucidate key fashionable details. This book would make an excellent companion toThe Dress Detective.
This book explores the realities of what we can and cannot know about a garment, particularly in terms of the why and when of its creation. The author's concept of the fluidity of time is critical to our better understanding of how individuals approach dress.