Hose is one of a variety of men's clothing styles for feet and lower body, worn from the Middle Ages to the 17th century, when the term was not used for pants and pantyhose. (See also trousers.) The old "hose" plural form is hosen . In German these terms (Hose, singular, and Hosen, plural) are still used and are a generic term for today's trousers. The French equivalent is chausses .
Video Hose (clothing)
History
Early wool hose was installed on the feet, and the fifteenth-century hose was often colored or
In the sixteenth century, the hoses had been separated into two garments: the upper hose or the panties and the cold hose or the panty hose.
From the mid-16th century until the beginning of the 17th century, various styles of hoses were in fashion. Popular styles include:
- Strip hose or round hose , a soft short hose. Very short luggage hose worn over cannions , hose mounted above knee.
- Slops or galligaskins , the lapse hose reaches just below the knee.
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- Hose and bar slop can either be paned or pansied with a strip of cloth ( panel ) above the full inner layer or layer. Pansied slop is a round hose characterized by the addition of a panel layer, or strip of cloth that flows from the waist to the toe. This is usually referred to as "pumpkin" trousers.
- Pluderhosen , the northern European shape of the reservoir flanked by a very full inner layer is pulled out between the panels and hanging below the knee. Originating from Germany, Pluderhosen soon spread to central and eastern Europe.
- Venetian , the semi-peg hose reaches just below the knee.
Maps Hose (clothing)
Gallery
See also
- 1500-1550 in mode
- 1550-1600 in mode
References
Note
Bibliography
- Arnold, Janet: Dress Pattern: cuts and clothing construction for men and women 1560-1620 , Macmillan 1985. Revised edition 1986. (ISBN 0-89676-083- 9)
External links
- Medieval hose and 16th-century interval, from illustrations and museums
Source of the article : Wikipedia