HistWardrobe
Vendor
- Messages
- 53
- Location
- King George, VA
What I DON'T like about wearing vintage
1. Period sizes make me feel like a porker. I'm carrying about 10 lbs more than I should, but I'm not actually fat fat, just a little on the plump side. In modern clothes I'm about a 12. In period clothes, I'm a size 20 to 22, even with period underpinnings. The REALLY attractive and interesting vintage clothes invariably seem to be have a 34" bust and 26 inch waist. It's VERY hard to find things in a 42" bust. What's available in my size usually seems to be old lady clothes -- good ol' basic black or navy, or house dresses. If I DO find a more stylish and interesting item in my size, it usually goes for twice the price of an equivalent smaller dress. There's plenty of us out there looking for larger sizes, and the supply/demand curve isn't in our favor. Repros, on the other hand, come in modern sizing and more color choices.
2. Another good reason to wear reproductions: Guilt-free period style! Wearing original vintage clothing ultimately reduces the life of the garment. And with all original artifacts, once it's gone, it's gone. We tend to think of 1930s-50s stuff as "vintage" but anything over 50 years old is legitimately an "antique", not merely "vintage". By wearing these clothes, we're ultimately reducing the number of surviving originals that future generations of clothing historians might study. I collect original Civil War era clothing, and it's heartbreaking to see the damage to original garments inflicted by people wearing them in the 1930's heyday of magnolia pageants and the like when they were merely "grandma's old dress", or later by Civil War Centennial reenactors in the 1960s. To put this in perspective, 1860s clothes were 70 years old in the 1930s -- roughly the same age that 1930s clothes are nowadays.
I DO wear originals, but only very sturdy ones and only in circumstances where they'll be getting very light wear and I won't have them on for more than a couple of hours. Even then, I feel guilty as sin.
They certainly shouldn't be danced in, or worn outside when it might rain, or sweated into in hot weather (rots the fabric). And the more they're worn, the more they will need to be cleaned or washed, which also reduces the life of a garment significantly.
3. One period style I like, but not on me: Flapper-era dresses are for the young or for the skinny. The more zaftig women like myself just can't pull off that boyish, slim-hipped look. I look fine in early 20's clothes, and in the clothes from ca. 1929 (the year of cool assymetrical hemlines!) onward, but in most 1925-1928 styles I look like a sack of potatoes. It's good I got the flapper thing out of my system in my late teens (my Zelda Fitzgerald wannabee phase) when I could actually wear this stuff.
1. Period sizes make me feel like a porker. I'm carrying about 10 lbs more than I should, but I'm not actually fat fat, just a little on the plump side. In modern clothes I'm about a 12. In period clothes, I'm a size 20 to 22, even with period underpinnings. The REALLY attractive and interesting vintage clothes invariably seem to be have a 34" bust and 26 inch waist. It's VERY hard to find things in a 42" bust. What's available in my size usually seems to be old lady clothes -- good ol' basic black or navy, or house dresses. If I DO find a more stylish and interesting item in my size, it usually goes for twice the price of an equivalent smaller dress. There's plenty of us out there looking for larger sizes, and the supply/demand curve isn't in our favor. Repros, on the other hand, come in modern sizing and more color choices.
2. Another good reason to wear reproductions: Guilt-free period style! Wearing original vintage clothing ultimately reduces the life of the garment. And with all original artifacts, once it's gone, it's gone. We tend to think of 1930s-50s stuff as "vintage" but anything over 50 years old is legitimately an "antique", not merely "vintage". By wearing these clothes, we're ultimately reducing the number of surviving originals that future generations of clothing historians might study. I collect original Civil War era clothing, and it's heartbreaking to see the damage to original garments inflicted by people wearing them in the 1930's heyday of magnolia pageants and the like when they were merely "grandma's old dress", or later by Civil War Centennial reenactors in the 1960s. To put this in perspective, 1860s clothes were 70 years old in the 1930s -- roughly the same age that 1930s clothes are nowadays.
I DO wear originals, but only very sturdy ones and only in circumstances where they'll be getting very light wear and I won't have them on for more than a couple of hours. Even then, I feel guilty as sin.
They certainly shouldn't be danced in, or worn outside when it might rain, or sweated into in hot weather (rots the fabric). And the more they're worn, the more they will need to be cleaned or washed, which also reduces the life of a garment significantly.
3. One period style I like, but not on me: Flapper-era dresses are for the young or for the skinny. The more zaftig women like myself just can't pull off that boyish, slim-hipped look. I look fine in early 20's clothes, and in the clothes from ca. 1929 (the year of cool assymetrical hemlines!) onward, but in most 1925-1928 styles I look like a sack of potatoes. It's good I got the flapper thing out of my system in my late teens (my Zelda Fitzgerald wannabee phase) when I could actually wear this stuff.