FedoraFan112390
Practically Family
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Are the pants in the following pix, by the best of your estimation, slacks or chinos?
Were not the original 'chinos" only Khaki in color...???
We talk about what our fathers wore, which is understandable. But we usually don't mention what our grandfathers and great-grandfathers wore. Mostly it wasn't that different, I suspect, although some things will stand out.
One thing that the older generations usually wore that had gone out of style with our father's generation was high-top dress shoes. They seem to have reappeared lately, however, but in a heavier and fancier style, like British shooting boots. But the older dress shoes typically had thinner soles and thin uppers, all leather, but don't ask me what kind of leather. All that I ever saw were black and had capped toes.
Men's everyday clothes, which we would call "dress clothes" today, haven't changed that much since before 1900, incredibly enough. Such clothing was invariably a suit consisting of a jacket and pants and sometimes a vest. Details of styling varied a lot and still do but the basic fit has remained the same with some exceptions. Some years the waist was a little more fitted than usual but otherwise, that's about it. Lapels varied in width, width of the trouser legs, plain front or with pleats, all variations of a basic design, referred to as a sack suit or lounge suit and today, more likely called a business suit.
What you probably won't find today is a heavy-weight suit. Instead, they tend to come in "year-round" weight, which for all practical purposes is a warm weather suit. Light color suits are not in fashion at the moment, apparently. The shirt was available in innumerable variations over the years and so was the tie.
A business suit was not formal dress and I doubt anyone in my family ever had anything formal. A business suit is considered "informal," but not casual, of course. It was not considered a working dress, necessarily, although an old, worn-out suit might be worn for until it was rags and possibly acquired second-hand. This is all for ordinary people. Rich people had their own rules and just like today, were unconcerned with whatever rules ordinary people had to follow.
Another difference was that our grandfathers and great-grandfathers probably wore suspenders--braces. My father never wore them, although I do with some pants. And then there are hats.
My father wore a hat when dress up for his whole life, a baseball cap when working. But he never had a homburg or a straw boater. My wife's grandfather had a straw boater, though, and we have it now. But it's not in good enough shape to wear and anyway, it's the wrong size. My father did wear a straw dress hat which I guess you would call a fedora.
Well, styles and hence, formality in clothing, is continually changing, so it's difficult to pin down a date to when something changed. In other words, it's always changing.
Formal day dress, which is what the men are wearing in the wedding photos above, is sometimes still worn but very, very rarely. I think that's the uniform for appearing before the Supreme Court. But I could be wrong because I've never done that. Formal day dress (tail coat, vest and striped pants) used to be a standard outfit for a daytime wedding. For the past few decades, though, the groom has sometimes worn what amounts to a costume.
Chances are my great-grandfathers might have worn a frock coat but probably never a tail coat. But given that all my grandfathers and great-grandfathers were farmers, it is more than likely that they would never have owned such an outfit, no more likely than they would have owned a silk top hat. Such things were still being worn into the 1920s, though. It you go back far enough and believe it or not, we all have antecedents who lived before the Civil War, there would have been other forms of men's clothing (as well as women's, another topic). But most people were not wealthy enough to keep up with the latest fashions and for that matter, most men would have had no use for much of the clothing the well-off would have worn. They had clothes they wore for work and at least one outfit to wear to the meeting house. More people still lived in rural areas then and city people may have dressed a little differently. And so on and so forth.
I wore a kilt and day jacket with a necktie when my wife and I were married in a church ceremony in Washington, D.C. in 1979. My wife wore the usual wedding dress. Two of the other men in the wedding party also wore kilts. When my daughter got married a few years ago, the groom wore his Air Force uniform and the other men wore matching rented suits. In the wedding of one of my nephews last summer, all the men wore matching rented suits again but a fair number of the guests wore tuxedos, something I've never worn in my life. But it was a summertime outdoor wedding and the men did not wear their jackets, just vests and pants. For most men anymore, a suit is about as dressed up as it ever gets. Even in church on Christmas eve, many men were dressed casually.