Monday, March 2, 2026

McCall Style News, May 1928

 McCall Style News simply describes this dress as "Ladies' and Misses' Dress; with scarves", but as it is illustrated by a picture of a young woman racing over a court to return a serve it was clearly most likely intended to be worn as a tennis dress.  Women had been playing (lawn) tennis since the game was invented in the 1870s, but it was only in the 1920s that they could move freely on the court, unencumbered by long skirts and corsets.


Fortunately for us, there were plenty of fashion experts in 1928, giving us advice on correct (tennis) court wear.  First we have Vogue who notes the newest innovation of sleeveless dresses:
The tennis dress is frequently sleeveless, a point of interest in so far as the fashion for sleeveless dresses has never, until this season, seemed quite chic or correct.  It may be that, with the growing practice of spending the summer in resorts famous for their winter sunshine, the smart woman has adopted a fashion that suggests greater comfort and ease.  In other words, like the sports mode in general, the sleeveless dress is the outcome of the sportswoman's necessities.
Vogue, April 15 1928

Monday, February 23, 2026

"For the Dancing Hours" (Weldon's Ladies' Journal, August 1927)

 How could I write about the fashions of the 1920s without including one post about dance dresses!  This was the Jazz Age—the era of the Charleston and the Shuffle, the Black Bottom and the foxtrot.  Weldon's produced the dress patterns below, suitable for the energetic dances of the 1920s.  Even a few years earlier, these designs would have been considered daringly immodest!


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The net tucker, small puff sleeves and the little bows give an old-world air to this charmingly youthful Dance Frock for taffeta.

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Cut on classical lines this graceful Evening Frock is suited to the tall slim girl.  It is of crépe romaine trimmed with pearl embroidery.

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Kilted frills trim the skirt of this Dance Frock for crépe de chine, and small kilted wings hang in cascades from each shoulder.

Monday, February 16, 2026

Montgomery Ward & Co. Catalogue Number 104, Spring and Summer 1926

 When I saw this page I knew at once that it was going to represent 1926.  These colourful, low-waisted dresses (with a bit of flare in the skirts) are the very epitome of 1920s fashion.

The straight, flat-chested silhouette wasn't easy for everyone to achieve and Montgomery Ward advertised some "slenderizing" fashions for larger-sized women on the bottom of the page.  While they tricked the eye of the beholder into seeing their wearers as smaller than they really were, it's probably worth noting that they also would have been wearing some of the extra-reinforced corsets available in later pages of the catalogue.

Monday, February 9, 2026

"Learning to Make Trimmings" by Jane Hedden Loewen (Modern Priscilla, November 1925)

 In the 1920s, no outfit was complete without a hat.  If you had clever fingers, you could save money by buying an untrimmed hat and making it up yourself.  Below are some suggestions for trimmings and instructions on how to make them from The Modern Priscilla in November 1925.



From top to bottom we have models 5135, 5137 and 5134.

Monday, February 2, 2026

Blouses (Miroir Des Modes, Aouet 1924)

 In the 1920s buttoned up, tucked in blouses were Out, and slip-over overblouses were In.  Butterick produced a number of patterns for blouses in 1924, some of which appear in this illustration from Miroir des Modes below.

All these patterns also appeared in various issues of The Delineator in 1924.  I've taken the descriptions in English from The Delineator, though in some cases the magazine published different pattern views than the ones on this page.  4993 and 5085 at the bottom left of the illustration appeared in winter issues of The Delineator and were described with long sleeves.

Monday, January 26, 2026

The "National" Money-Saving Style Book (Spring and Summer 1923)

 For 1923 I'm posting a picture of some jaunty looking summer coats (and one cape) for the younger set.  Flapper fashions were more than just beads and fringes!


Below are the descriptions provided by the National Cloak & Suit Company: 

Monday, January 19, 2026

Ladies' Field Fashions (October 1922)

 I've said this before, but the look we think of as typically "twenties" really only belongs to the last years of the decade.  Here in 1922, however, we have a selection of suits and dresses that show the line in the process of evolving.  

Reading from left to right, No. 1 is carried out in crȇpe marocain, Kolinsky trimmed; No. 2 in duvetyn and skunk opossum; and No. 3 is in kasha.  Duvetyn and nutria express No. 4, and velveteen, No. 5
Interestingly enough, though these models are all numbered (implying that they were available as patterns?) there were no detailed descriptions accompanying the pictures.  The figure second on the left appears to be wearing a standard skirt suit, while the figure on the far right appears to be wearing a suit comprised of a skirt and cape in matching material with a coordinating overblouse.

On current trends, this issue of the Ladies' Field said:
To begin with the all-important matter of line.  Are our waists long or are they to be found in their normal position?  Well, in the vernacular, "some do and some don't."  Some, that is to say, of the new models show normal waist lines, others are long in effect, though not in reality, by means of wide waistbelts.  Others, again, are as long as ever, but do not look so owing to varied arrangements of drapery...
Sleeves are either non-existent or frankly immense.  In some cases capes form them; in others they would be trains if they were not caught up at the wrists...