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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Origins  





2 Women's redingote  



2.1  Gallery  







3 Style gallery  





4 References  





5 Notes  





6 External links  














Riding habit






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Elisabeth of Bavaria, Empress of Austria, in a riding habit, 1884

Ariding habit is women's clothing for horseback riding.

Since the mid-17th century, a formal habit for riding sidesaddle usually consisted of:

Low-heeled boots, gloves, and often a necktie or stock complete the ensemble. Typically, throughout the period the riding habit used details from male dress, whether large turned cuffs, gold trims or buttons. The colours were very often darker and more masculine than those on normal clothes. Earlier styles can be similar to the dresses worn by boys before breeching in these respects.

When high waists were the fashion, from roughly 1790 to 1820, the habit could be a coat dress called a riding coat (borrowed in French as redingote) or a petticoat with a short jacket (often longer in back than in front).

Riding habit with a closed skirt with stitched-in knee, c. 1885–1895
  • Riding habit, including jacket, riding skirt and divided skirt, c. 1900-1910
  • Riding habit, including jacket, riding skirt and divided skirt, c. 1900-1910
  • Divided habits in Washington, 3 March 1913
    Divided habits in Washington, 3 March 1913
  • High-waisted coat riding habit, 1801

    Origins

    [edit]

    In France in the 17th century, women who rode wore an outfit called a devantiere.[1] The skirt of the devantiere was split up the back to enable astride riding.[2] By the early 19th century, in addition to describing the whole costume, a devantiere could describe any part of the riding habit, be it the skirt,[2] the apron,[3] or the riding coat.[4]

    In his diary for June 12, 1666, Samuel Pepys wrote:

    Walking in the galleries at White Hall, I find the Ladies of Honour dressed in their riding garbs, with coats and doublets with deep skirts, just, for all the world, like mine; and buttoned their doublets up to the breast, with periwigs under their hats; so that, only for a long petticoat dragging under their men's coats, nobody could take them for women in any point whatever; which was an odde sight, and a sight did not please me.[5]

    Two and a half centuries later, Emily Post would write:

    A riding habit, no matter what the fashion happens to be, is like a uniform, in that it must be made and worn according to regulations. It must above all be meticulously trig and compact. Nothing must be sticking out a thousandth part of an inch that can be flattened in...Keep the idea of perfect clothes for men in mind, get nothing that the smartest man would not wear, and you can’t go wrong...Correct riding clothes are not fashion but form! Whether coat skirts are long or short, full or plain, and waists wasp-like or square, the above admonitions have held for many decades, and are likely to hold for many more.[6]

    Women's redingote

    [edit]
    Woman's redingote, c. 1790. Silk and cotton satin and plain weave. Los Angeles County Museum of Art[7]

    The redingote (or redingotte, redingot)[8] is a type of coat that has had several forms over time. The name is derived from a French alteration of the English "riding coat", an example of reborrowing.

    The first form of the redingote was in the 18th century, when it was used for travel on horseback. This coat was a bulky, utilitarian garment. It would begin to evolve into a fashionable accessory in the last two decades of the 18th century, when women began wearing a perfectly tailored style of the redingote, which was inspired by men's fashion of the time. Italian fashion also picked it up (the redingotte), adapting it for more formal occasions.

    The redingote à la Hussar (from French redingote à la Hussarde) was trimmed with parallel rows of horizontal braid in the fashion of Hussars' uniforms.

    The style continued to evolve through the late 19th century, until it took a form similar to today's redingote. The newer form is marked by a close fit at the chest and waist, a belt, and a flare toward the hem.

    [edit]
    [edit]

    References

    [edit]
    1. ^ Lewandowski, Elizabeth J. (2011). The complete costume dictionary. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press, Inc. p. 86. ISBN 9780810840041.
  • ^ a b Boileau, Daniel (1822). The French Remembrancer, Or, a New & Easy Method of Recollecting the Genders of French Nouns Substantive, Etc. T. Cadell & G. & W. B. Whittaker. p. 315.
  • ^ Boyer, Abel (1780). Dictionnaire royal francais-anglois et anglois-francois, 1: tiré des meillens auteurs qui ont écrit dans ces deux langues. Jean-Marie Bruyset. p. 192.
  • ^ Cobbett, William (1833). A New French and English Dictionary. p. 137.
  • ^ "Samuel Pepys Diary June 1666 complete".
  • ^ "33. Dress. Post, Emily. 1922. Etiquette". 3 March 2023.
  • ^ Takeda and Spilker (2010), pp. 82–83
  • ^ Oxford English Dictionary, Third Edition, September 2009
  • ^ "Regencygarderobe.com".
  • Notes

    [edit]
    [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Riding_habit&oldid=1188396332"

    Categories: 
    17th-century fashion
    18th-century fashion
    19th-century fashion
    Rider apparel
    History of clothing (Western fashion)
    Suits (clothing)
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
    Commons category link is on Wikidata
     



    This page was last edited on 5 December 2023, at 04:04 (UTC).

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