‘if it ain’t Baroque don’t fix it.’

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
CHINA SAMPLE. For hundreds of years China stood as a leading civilization, outpacing the rest of the world in the arts and sciences. SAMPLE.
Advertisements

Tudor Fashion - The Rich The Rich Wealthy Women Wealthy women wore many layers of clothes. They had many petticoats. They wore long gowns made out of.
Fabric Construction Chapter 12
In the Thirteen Colonies (More specifically, rich people’s clothing)
JANCO S.R.L. Italian casualwear manufacturer Company profile.
Baroque fashion Jana Brabcová. 17 th century The cradle is Italy The greatest use and popularity in France (during the reign of Louis XVI) The fashion.
Fibers & Fabrics Chapter 41. Think about… Do you have a favorite garment that you worn forever? What makes is such a favorite? Why do you think so many.
How fabric is made.
FIBER CHARACTERISTICS AND END USES Apparel Development I-Objective 1.04.
  The hot dry weather played a major role in shaping Egyptian fashion. Made of light linen, the clothing was loose and kept the body cool. The wealthy.
Baroque Period Part 1. Baroque means: very fancy, elaborate, over decorated, or ornamented.
Greek Clothing.
In Tudor times there were no synthetic fabrics. All Tudor clothes were made from only natural fabrics – fabrics that came from animals or plants. These.
 Nobility - Rich and powerful. The Queen could appoint new nobles, but this rarely happened. Most were born with this right. Even if a noble lost their.
Elizabethan Clothing For Upper-Class and Peasant Women.
Greek Clothing. Greek clothing was made out of three types of materials. The first mostly used was wool which was woven from very coarse to very soft.
Fabrics Apparel 2 – obj
Chapter 5 Textile Fiber and Fabric Production. Fashion From Concept to Consumer, 8/e© 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. Gini Frings Upper Saddle River, New.
A “Handful” of Mehndi 1.  Mehndi is the traditional art of Henna painting in India and the Middle-East.  This body paint is used for festive occasions,
The Colonies Remember, some people in England moved to the new American colony. This was a new place. The English king controlled the American colonies.
Advanced Fashion: Standard 5 Fabrics
Fabrics. Natural Fibers Cotton Cotton is a natural fiber. It is cool, soft, comfortable, and the principle clothing fiber of the world. Cotton is a natural.
Medieval Clothing By: Sawyer Walters Zantishia Hayes.
Fashion History Chapter 5.
September 24, 2014  Entry task: Sketch a garment that you think would be flattering on you and appropriate to wear to an awards ceremony. Why did you.
Quilting. Not every home produced its own cloth In the colonial period, less than half of all households had spinning wheels. Fewer than 10% owned looms.
Medieval Clothing By: Bryan Brick.
Plants and People DyesDyes. Dyes make the world more colorful. When the first man picked the first berry, dyes were discovered.
ELIZABETHAN CLOTHING By: Jala Harrison & Paige Lofton.
OBJECTIVE 4.01: RECOGNIZE BASIC TEXTILES USED IN INTERIORS.
EIGHTEEN CENTURY FASHION By : Elise. THE UPPER- CLASS  The dresses that belonged to the women of the upper-class were made of silk, satin, and velvet.
Middle Eastern art VISUAL LITERACY COMM Ana Santos, Chevelle Reppert, Philip Scranage, Andrew Richards.
Elizabethan Clothing Mallory Frost Tasnuva Hyder Martin Africa Craig McCaw.
Dyestuffs.
History of Textiles Origins & Shibori Dyeing. Origins of Textiles Wore animal skins = protection, decoration Developed range of materials for clothing/fabric:
Roman Clothing/Fabrics By: Lallia Octavia. Styles Togas were usually worn by men and in ancient Rome. Cloths were designed to be comfortable and to have.
The First Clothes What were the early clothes of these civilizations:
Dye: Colorant which is homogeneously dispersed in the dye medium
OBJECTIVE 4.01: RECOGNIZE BASIC TEXTILES USED IN INTERIORS.
Ch. 52 Fibers, Fabrics, and Clothing Care. Introduction Fabrics (textiles) part of everyday life Textiles begin as fibers Fibers made into fabrics Fabrics.
FIBERS FOR SPINNING Fibers used for spinning in America:
SWATCH RENDERING SUBMITTED TO:RISHA ROY SUBMITTED BY:TRUSHA VORA.
CLOTHING By: Katarina Klingensmith. Clothing for Women Women would be seen wearing shoes, over under skirt, bodice, hat or snood. The women generally.
OBJECTIVE 4.01: RECOGNIZE BASIC TEXTILES USED IN INTERIORS.
Arts and Craft that use plant, animal, or synthetic fibers to construct practical or decorative objects.
If You Were a Pioneer… What Would You Wear?.
Clothing in Ancient Rome
AP ART HISTORY PROJECT Jot Lambsar Period 5 4/21/14.
Ana Santos, Chevelle Reppert, Philip Scranage, Andrew Richards
Chapter 25 Northern Europe Flanders Rubens Studied the Italian masters, Michelangelo, Titian, Caravaggio and mixed them all together Patrons.
Mevada mahesh Chemical Engineer. Plants and People DyesDyes.
Fibre to Fabric. Fibres NaturalSynthetic Plants Animals Chemicals/ petroleum products Cotton Jute Linen Wool Silk Camel hair Nylon Polyester Acrylic.
Baroque Art Late 1600’s to Early 1700’s in Europe and Italy.
Natural Fibers Cotton Linen Wool Silk Natural Fibers Cotton: It comes from the cotton plant.
Chapter 25 Northern Europe
The History of Fashion.
Indian Fashion Leaves Everyone Captivated
Fashion in The Middle Ages
Fabric Construction: Woven Fabric Fabric Construction – Woven Fabrics
Native Americans Hopi SS 4H1: The students will describe how early native American cultures developed in North America
Introduction to Dyestuff Class- T.Y.B.Sc.
Ensuring outstanding teaching in art & design
Making color Reds.
Clothing in Medieval Scotland
Week 4: Rembrandt’s Nightwatch
How to Select the Wedding Linen Rentals
Weaving Art 2200.
Tudor Fashion.
Metals come from the ________are found in between rocks. These metals such as _______, _______ and ________ are _______________ Some metals are made by.
Presentation transcript:

‘if it ain’t Baroque don’t fix it.’ Baroque Clothing ‘if it ain’t Baroque don’t fix it.’

Baroque Clothing Types of Fabric mannerist period Heavier weight Complex Brocades Velvet Metallic thread Heavy Satins And Taffeta Middle class used wool Country people homespun fabrics Linen and cotton used for under garments Baroque Clothing

Baroque Clothing Terms Taffeta-usually smooth, crisp, and lustrous, plain-woven, and with a fine crosswise rib effect. Any of various other fabrics of silk, linen, wool, etc., in use at different periods. Brocades-fabric woven with an elaborate design, esp. one having a raised overall pattern. Homespun fabrics-a plain-weave cloth made at home, or of homespun yarn. Baroque Clothing

The Wedding Dance in the Open Air 1566 oil on panel 119x157cm Bruegel Portrait of Francis I, King of France c. 1540 Oil on wood, 27 x 22 cm By Clouet Baroque Clothing

Baroque Clothing Late mannerist Early Baroque Fabrics Very Stiff Much interlining Much padding Baroque Clothing

Early Baroque Fabrics Satin Velvets Fabrics now soft flowing Natural fabric showing Middle class and poor still were woolen clothes Lace is now being used in both Venice and Flanders Baroque Clothing

The Calling of St. Matthew Italian Baroque oil on canvas 1599-1600 by Caravaggio The Company of Frans Banning Cocq (Nightwatch) Dutch Baroque oil on canvas 1642 by Rembrandt Baroque Clothing

Baroque Clothing Late Baroque Fabric Same as Early Baroque Metallic threads and Brocades are being brought back Women still not wearing corsets Printed cotton garments are being seen in France and England Baroque Clothing

Queen Henrietta Maria, London 1632 -- Anthony Van Dyck Chancellor Séguier 1655-57 (100 Kb); Canvas; Louvre – Le Brun Baroque Clothing

Baroque Clothing Men start to wear petticoat's Men start to wear wigs instead of growing hair to shoulders. Hat differ from area to area see page 257 in hand out. Woad was a European herb (Isatis tinctoria) of the mustard family grown for the blue dyestuff yielded by its leaves - cultivated as a source of blue dye Madder was a European herb (Rubia tinctorum) the root of which was used in dyeing cultivated as a source of red dye Weld was a European plant (Reseda luteola) cultivated as a source of yellow dye - also called dyer's rocket, dyer's mignonette and also known as dyer's broom Lichen - A plant of the division Lichenes which occur as crusty patches or bushy growths on tree trunks or rocks or bare ground etc - a source of green dye Baroque Clothing

The source of the dye for Tyrian Purple was made in Tyre, Lebanon by crushing thousands of sea shells - Mediterranean Murex The source of the dye for Indigo, the deep, rich dark blue was from the indigo plants and the dye was imported from India The source of the dye for Crimson cloth was cochineal from the bodies of the Cochineal insects of Central America produced by the Aztecs Another, older, source of the dye for crimson and bright scarlet cloth was Kermes a Mediterranean insect. The colorfast yellow dye produced from saffron, the dried stamen of an oriental crocus Baroque Clothing