I make Historic Clothing-copies of garments from history. I attend meetings and events of Living History groups where everyone I see is wearing clothing from the era the group covers. For many years I have contemplated moving into the field of Historic Plain Dress (female only, as I never took the 7-year-long Master tailoring course.) But whether I do that or not, I'm left with a dilemma; As a professional costumer, is wearing Plain Dress myself a witness, or advertising?

(I wore Plain Dress from the 1830s for a few college semesters, until my then-husband objected. Loudly. Often.)

As if the issue of Plain dress were not complicated enough, I also wear and teach historic clothing at meetings of the Living History group to which I belong.  I have "outgrown" my once-legendary collection of upper-class Tudor clothing, dripping with silks and jewels, that was both my pride and my best advertising. I already know I will never go back to those excesses, but what replaces them? Why? How soon?

Views: 24

Comment by Barra Jacob-McDowell on 7th mo. 11, 2011 at 1:16am

Honour,

 

I can identify with your dilemma. As a professional, traditional Celtic storyteller specializing in Scottish and Welsh tales and music, performing as "Barra the Bard", I often dress as a Scotswoman of ca.1745 in my airsaid (see picture!) at Highland Games, festivals and other events. I feel a drawing towards Plain Dress, but don't want others to think of it as a costume, that is, just worn as one instead of as a witness. Also, I was given almost an entire wardrobe of almost-new clothing (including several suits) by a late friend at a time when I really needed them...and since I've been jobhunting for over a year, and it's hard to find a job, I'm uneasy about how much employers would be willing to hire me for a front-desk position if I look too different. Paul Gallico wrote in one of his cat novels that a cat's motto was "When in doubt, wash." My inclination is to wait until I see more clearly.  But it IS a concern.

Comment by Martin Kelley on 7th mo. 11, 2011 at 10:50am
I read an academic article that said that popular contemporary ideas of Quaker plainness have more to do with historic re-enactors dressing up for special days at their meeting than to their actual plain-dressing ancestors. The modern Friends would pull the clothes from their attic and insist that these were the uniform of earlier Friends, whereas there weren't strict uniforms. If you read the old testimony, there's no dress requirements listed--it's all a state of mind, a readyness to wait in meekness toward God.
Comment by Honour Horne-Jaruk on 7th mo. 11, 2011 at 4:20pm
True, there were no "uniforms" in the military sense of the word; but there were standards common to each Yearly Meeting area, and departing from those standards too widely could, and did, get you read out of Meeting. The problem is that those standards kept changing. In 1801, wearing a high-waisted gown in a light color was a major, and dangerous, deviation. By 1830 _not_ wearing one was.
Comment by Honour Horne-Jaruk on 7th mo. 11, 2011 at 6:10pm

Correction: 1820.

 

Comment

You need to be a member of QuakerQuaker to add comments!

Join QuakerQuaker

Tip Jar

It takes many hours a month to sift through hundreds of websites to come up with this daily curated list of the best of the Quaker web. If you learn more about Friends and find joy and spiritual growth in the conversations these links provide, please consider supporting the ministry with a monthly subscription.

You can also make a one-time donation.

Latest Activity

Profile IconQuakerQuaker.org

Craig Barnett: Trusting in the Spirit

absence of conflict or an easy consensus. It is an active process of self-discipline that enables… See More
2 hours ago
Irene Lape posted blog posts
6 hours ago
James C Schultz commented on Clem Gerdelmann's blog post 'A Penchant For Praise'
"I would suggest we have to look no further than Paul's letter to the Galatians: Gal 5:22:But…"
12 hours ago
Doug Bennett commented on Doug Bennett's blog post 'A New Association of Friends Is Born'
"A composite answer to Jim Wilson's question from NAF folks including Margaret Fraser, Michael…"
16 hours ago
Clem Gerdelmann commented on Kevin Camp's blog post 'Confronting Mental Illness in Monthly Meetings'
"Thankyou, Kevin, for again addressing the challenge("speaking to one's condition"?)…"
18 hours ago
Clem Gerdelmann posted a blog post

A Penchant For Praise

No one knows better than a person of German ancestry the shame at disgust. Whether idleness when…See More
18 hours ago
Jim Wilson commented on Doug Bennett's blog post 'A New Association of Friends Is Born'
"Sounds promising.  I am curious; is the NAF intended to be an Indiana Association, or does it…"
20 hours ago
Honour Horne-Jaruk commented on Kevin Camp's blog post 'Confronting Mental Illness in Monthly Meetings'
"As a (currently homeless) bipolar, I am part of a family that has some form of mental illness in…"
22 hours ago

About QuakerQuaker

QuakerQuaker is a community of Friends exploring Primitive Christianity Revived: plain witness, ministry, beliefs. Quaker blogs, photos, videos & gatherings. Learn More.

Subscribe in a reader
Get daily emails
Facebook
iTunes / Podcast
Twitter / Twitter Quaker List

 

Advertise:

Learn about QQ Advertising

Place an Order

The QuakerQuaker Audience

Quakers

© 2013   Created by QuakerQuaker.

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service