Fashion in the year 1900.
Women’s Fashion.
The ideal body shape was the S-curve silhouette, breasts pushed forward, butt pushed back and a tiny waist, thanks to extremely tight corsets which were very popular at the time. These corsets were structural, and women could not slouch in them. The figure was intended to look modest but “dramatic” and women wore petticoats, padding, and floor length skirts to exaggerate their shape.
Blouses had high necks, puffed sleeves, and lace or embroidery details. Bodices were tailored and structured with boning or internal stays. Most dresses were in two pieces, a bodice and a long, elaborate skirt. Lots of muted tones, deep jewel colors, or pale pastels for upper class women. Earthier colors for the working class. Huge, ornate hats with feathers, flowers, and ribbons were essential, gloves also worn everywhere. Hair was long and always up in pinned styles, soft waves, buns and Gibson girl updos.
Men’s Fashion:
The ideal silhouette was clean, fitted, and controlled. Three-piece suits were standard (trousers, vest, and jackets). Waistcoats were often richly patterned or textured. Suits had high collars and narrow lapels. Bowler hats or top hats were popular, depending on how formal. Pocket watches, walking sticks, and leather gloves were in style. Facial hair was going out of style surprisingly, clean shaven or neatly groomed mustaches were in.
The style of 1900 was of restrained elegance, but behind the scenes it was uncomfortable, over layered and had many social rules to it. Fashion was about class and respectability, showing you knew your place in the world. Working class people wore simpler versions of the same styles, mostly hand me downs or homemade clothes. For upper class, a lot of fashion was practically a full time job for them. You couldn’t not be dressed to the nines.















