The History of Fashion and Dress
Theatre 355 Online Version University of Alaska Fairbanks
Instructor, Tara Maginnis, Ph.D.

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Week #10:  
First and Second Bustle Periods

Step 1:

Read the online "lecture" on dress in the 1870's & 1880's below and click on any links that interest you.  You are not required to read all the material on all the links, however:

Dress in The First and Second Bustle Periods

Fashionable women's dress in the era of the 1870's and 1880's, while looking quite modest to modern eyes, was viewed as unashamedly erotic in it's own day. The bustle, the cornerstone on which women's dress depended, focused the majority of the decoration and clothing focus on a woman's backside, and emphasized the movement of that body part to heroic proportions.

modeart1873umbrella.jpg (30824 bytes) 1872  1873petersons6.jpg (42411 bytes) 1873

The dress of the first bustle period (1870's) is noted for the lightness of it's material and decoration, swathing the lower reaches of a woman's body in numerous ruffles and pleats, often in light colors using the new and vibrant aniline dyes

.1874godey4.jpg (190624 bytes) 1874 LesModesSept77.jpg (104024 bytes) 1877. Image courtesy of Aquarian Gallery Antique Prints and Maps

1879review.jpg (31768 bytes) 1879

Late in this decade (1878-79) was the "Fishtail" style, where the lower part of the skirt was tight, and ended in a train.

Photograph1880.JPG (48390 bytes)  modeart1880a.jpg (30628 bytes) 1880

The second bustle period (the 1880's) is heavier, with decoration more resembling upholstery style.  Colors get more Jewel-toned and velvets, heavy satins and brocades replace the taffetas and cottons of the 1870's. Surface decoration is often of passementarie or jet beads, giving the whole ensemble a more mature flavor.

1880sgodey.jpg (61134 bytes) c. 1885   june86t.jpg (4058 bytes) 1886

Men's dress in this era continues in it's general dullness but begins to be enlivened with sportswear, an area that continues to provide the most intriguing variants of men's dress.

Dress during the 1870's and 1880's came more and more under the influence of  the Rational Dress Movement and the Aesthetic Movement .  Dress reform from artists, feminists and socialists provided a continuous counterpoint to the more frivolous dress of fashionable women, and the more tedious dress of fashionable men.

Mvc-013f.gif (15999 bytes) Anti-corset caricature

Dress reformers of the Aesthetic movement such as Oscar Wilde promoted jewel-toned velvet suits with breeches for men, but only found a lasting audience among mothers who dressed small boys in "Little Lord Fauntleroy" suits in this style. Caricaturists such as George du Maurier simultaneously lampooned the Aesthetic dress even as they spread it's influence.  The Gilbert and Sullivan opera Patience spread the Aesthetic style to America, with costumes from Liberty Co. where it was transformed in the following decades into the Arts and Crafts Movement.  Women's aesthetic dress, with it's semi medieval lines and uncorseted waists were transformed by popular taste into the Teagown, a fashionable lady's at home garment.

Rational dress advocates like George Bernard Shaw tried to popularize Jaeger combination suits (which resembled woolen long johns), but were laughed off the streets.  Dr Jaeger's more conservative ensembles of wool knickers and a Norfolk jacket however were accepted as men's sportswear even among the fashionable.

10338_16.jpg (52911 bytes) Hunting suits of the 1870's

Step 2:

Choose from one of the following topics to do a short research project:

 This Concludes Week #10's Lesson

  Return to Class Index 

1870godey2.jpg (221376 bytes) 1870 1871godey1.jpg (61365 bytes) 1871

 

pete1878.jpg (19470 bytes) 1878 

More images from the First Bustle Period (1870's)

1880sjacket.jpg (35281 bytes) 1883 modeart1883a.jpg (47574 bytes)  1883

 

DuMaurier1887.JPG (118448 bytes) 1887 1880s4.jpg (21640 bytes) c.1888

1889ladies.jpg (265599 bytes) 1889

10338_09.jpg (47455 bytes) 1870's 
1880's

 

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