Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - What are the styles and characteristics of Western clothing in the Renaissance?

What are the styles and characteristics of Western clothing in the Renaissance?

1. Three phases of the development of Renaissance clothing and the characteristics of each phase:

Italian-style period features: underwear partially exposed from the seams of the tunic, and the surface of the gorgeous brocade fabric in contrast to further set off the beauty of the fabric.

Men's Pulpoon: three distinctive features of craftsmanship and garment construction: first, quilting, with backstitching; second, the front opening; and third, a change in the way medieval robes were cut.

Split female robe: the outer gauge seems to be connected to the top and bottom, with seams at the waist.

Features of the Germanic period: notched garments, the use of fur as a collar or decorative method of the edge of the garment

The notched garments, also called mercenary infantry style, originally meant to be chopped, slashed and cut with knives, swords, etc., and were extended to include cuts, slits, splits, or decorative seams on the garment.

Spanish period characteristics: the pursuit of extreme peculiar shape and exaggerated performance, sewing technology is highly skilled.

The popularity of crewnecks: closed whorls, open collars, shawls. Corset: Whale baleen corset, Buna corset. Skirt: bell hoop skirt, ring wheel hoop skirt

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