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Victorian Bathing and Bathing Suits : The Culture of the Two-Piece Bathing Dress from 1837 - 1901

Victorian Bathing and Bathing Suits : The Culture of the Two-Piece Bathing Dress from 1837 - 1901

Author: Deb Salisbury
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
Publication Date: 20 Nov 2013
ISBN-13: 9781492971405
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Description


When I decided to create a new bathing suit pattern, I searched for a modern book documenting Victorian bathing suits. To my surprise, I couldn't find one. Yet I had quite a few period magazines with engravings of bathing dresses in my collection. While I was doing more research, I fell in love with the traditions and ethics surrounding American, English, and French bathing.This book focuses on the culture of swimming and sea bathing across the decades, and on women's bathing suits, noting their styles, variations, and evolution, all quoted from the original writers of that time. For your enjoyment, I've included descriptions and engravings of men's and children's suits when I could find them, but their clothing was not as well documented as the ladies' dresses.The culture and proper dress of bathing changed radically during Queen Victoria's reign, led, of course, by the French. The accepted ladies' one-piece bathing gown gave way to the two-piece bathing suit, and bathing went from a medical treatment to a social event.Even the French bathing dress was not admired in its early days. It was plain, usually black, and, at best, boring. But once fashion got hold of the bathing suit, the dress evolved rapidly. By 1870, many bathing suits were downright gorgeous. Fashion magazines began to include descriptions and engravings on a regular basis, vying to provide the most up-to-date styles. Bathing went from a quick, unpleasant dip in the ocean to true enjoyment, and even swimming became popular.Victorian Bathing and Bathing Suits has over 125 period illustrations. It is intended for costume historians, bathing enthusiasts, Victorian re-enactors, historical writers and history buffs.


Author Description


I'm the owner of the Mantua-Maker Historical Sewing Patterns, established in 1994. My costuming career began early - making dresses for my sister's dolls. I discovered costuming at the BayCon masquerade, a science fiction convention held in 1985, and soon thereafter fell in love with historical costuming. After many years of collecting historical clothing terms, I decided to assemble and share them with other costume historians. Five Rivers Publishing, based in Canada, published my first non-fiction work, Elephant's Breath & London Smoke: Historic Colour Names, Definitions & Uses in 2009. My second non-fiction work, "Fabric à la Romantic Regency: A Glossary of Fabrics from Original Sources, 1795 - 1836" was published in 2013 and is available on Smashwords and on Etsy. Although I grew up in Northern California, I've lived in England and Colorado, and currently reside in sunny Central Texas. I've been a receptionist, a waitress, a computer programmer, a warranty clerk, a real estate assistant, an inept archer, a costume maker and a dressmaker.






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