Vladimir Berkov
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,291
- Location
- Austin, TX
Much less than people generally own now, for sure.
It was mainly class-based to a large degree, although personal preferences also factored in. An upper-middle-class man in New York would have more and better clothes than a lower-class sharecropper in Texas.
Most working-class people would have their "Sunday best" which would be worn to weddings, funerals, sunday services, and other important occassions and these clothes would not be worn everyday. Most people on the street in 1935 didn't look like Clark Gable.
That said, the number of poeple who wore "real clothes" such as jackets, shirts and ties, leather-soled shoes, etc was much larger than it is today. Even working-class men had a general sense of what was respectable, and the middle-class in particular was very keen on what was proper attire for different events.
It was mainly class-based to a large degree, although personal preferences also factored in. An upper-middle-class man in New York would have more and better clothes than a lower-class sharecropper in Texas.
Most working-class people would have their "Sunday best" which would be worn to weddings, funerals, sunday services, and other important occassions and these clothes would not be worn everyday. Most people on the street in 1935 didn't look like Clark Gable.
That said, the number of poeple who wore "real clothes" such as jackets, shirts and ties, leather-soled shoes, etc was much larger than it is today. Even working-class men had a general sense of what was respectable, and the middle-class in particular was very keen on what was proper attire for different events.