Veronica Parra
Practically Family
- Messages
- 569
Fletch said:Forget the codpiece. Please. For the love of all that's holy.
Add bullet bras and padding to your list.
Fletch said:Forget the codpiece. Please. For the love of all that's holy.
Veronica Parra said:Yes indeed, and monocles also served a practical purpose. They still do, if the wearer genuinely has a vision problem in one eye. Otherwise, they're outlandish at best and pretentious at worst.
Tango Yankee said:Of course, there are plenty of people who would say the same thing about wearing vintage clothing in general as anything other than a costume.
Tango Yankee said:I think it more likely that they were used as a reading aid.
Doran said:OK, folks, I ordered the monocle last night.
*****Haversack said:Now codpieces admittedly are not currently a part of everyday mens' clothing, in their day they served a practical purpose. When mens' individual woolen hose began to be joined together towards the end of the 14th C., a way was needed to to cover the area in front while still allowing access for calls of nature. The codpiece was the result of this need. Originally, it was just a flap sewn to the hose at the bottom and tied to the waistband at the top. It opened like the fall-front of 18th C. trousers. It wasn't until later in the 15th C. that it began to be emphasized.Haversack.
Haversack said:May I draw your attention to the Billy Wilder movie, _1, 2, 3._? It is a subversive cold war comedy set in Berlin just before the wall went up. In it, there is a minor character called the Count von Droste-Schattenburg played by the German actor, Hubert von Meyerinck. He has something of the look it sounds like you are after: bald head, monocle, dark suit, (it may be a stroller).
For any who have not seen this movie, the sartorial scramble towards the end of the movie where they turn the young East German Communist into a West German "pushing young particle" is particualarly funny from a clothing point of view.
Haversack.
Doran said:(And if anyone can get me that "Staunch Vaudevillian" button I'll give your children free Greek and Latin lessons for a year.)
Veronica Parra said:My dear erudite Doran, it's spelled "Vaudevillain", not "Vaudevillian." The word is French, after all.
Orgetorix said:When did you two get married?
patrick1987 said:Good show! Please do post pictures. Don't forget your handkerchief for the Baptism.