Reader or writer of the early 1800s, or Regency Era? For information and pictures, try Regency Life Series by Suzi Love, award winning and best selling Australian author. Bigger and better images now allowed! Yippee! All books updated in this light-hearted series about Regency Era, or early 1800s. For writers, readers and history lovers.
1800s “Admiration”. By Vittorio Reggianini. Oil on canvas. This looks like a typical drawing room scene from Jane Austen’s lifetime, or the early 1800s, or the Regency Era. Via Wikimedia Commons commons.wikimedia.org
What was fashionable for men in early 1800s, or Jane Austen’s time, or Regency Era? Suits, hats, shoes, underclothing, fashion accessories, military and bedroom fashions. French fashions and Georgian and Regency Era fashions from Great Britain were copied around the world. https://books2read.com/SuziLoveFashionMen1800-1819
Love the Bridgertons? Want to know what was fashionable for men in early 1800s, or Jane Austen’s time, or Regency Era? Suits, hats, shoes, underclothing, fashion accessories, military and bedroom fashions. French fashions and Georgian and Regency Era fashions from Great Britain were copied around the world. https://books2read.com/SuziLoveFashionMen1800-1819
1802 Full Dress of Blue Court Suit, French. Man’s grand parure, or full dress, with white lace on the tailcoat and ruffles on the shirt, jewels, white stockings, black dress shoes, sword and a bicorn hat under his arm. Fashion Plate via Journal des Dames et des Modes, Costume Parisien. Typical menswear for court in most parts of Europe in the early 1800s, or Regency Era, or Jane Austen’s times, included a tailcoat, a vest or waistcoat, breeches, stockings, dress shoes, and hat.
1802 Full Dress of Blue Court Suit, French. Man’s grand parure, or full dress, with white lace on the tailcoat and ruffles on the shirt, jewels, white stockings, black dress shoes, sword and a bicorn hat under his arm. Fashion Plate via Journal des Dames et des Modes, Costume Parisien. Typical menswear for court in most parts of Europe in the early 1800s, or Regency Era, or Jane Austen’s times, included a tailcoat, a vest or waistcoat, breeches, stockings, dress shoes, and hat.1802 Gentlemen's Full Dress Of Blue Court Suit, French. #Regency #JaneAusten #Fashion https://books2read.com/SuziLoveFashionMen1800-1819 Click To TweetHN_23_d2d_fashionmen1800-1819
https://books2read.com/SuziLoveFashionMen1800-1819
What was fashionable for men in early 1800s, or Jane Austen’s time, or Regency Era? Suits, hats, shoes, underclothing, fashion accessories, military and bedroom fashions. French fashions and Georgian and Regency Era fashions from Great Britain were copied around the world. https://books2read.com/SuziLoveFashionMen1800-1819
Fashion Men 1800-1819 History Notes Book 23
What was fashionable for men in the early 1800s? Take a look at their suits, hats, shoes, underclothing, fashion accessories, military and bedroom fashions. French
What was fashionable for men in early 1800s, or Jane Austen’s time, or Regency Era? Suits, hats, shoes, underclothing, fashion accessories, military and bedroom fashions. https://books2read.com/SuziLoveFashionMen1800-1819
19th Century Early Typical Regency Era Men’s Pants With Drop Down Front Flap. Jane Austen’s male family and friends wore pants with this sort of front buttoning. And if you are a fan of the Bridgertons, this is what the men’s pants would have looked like. Breeches, pantaloons and trousers usually opened by front flaps which dropped down and were fastened with buttons. No belts but pants were instead held up by tight-fitting waists and adjusted to fit snugly by ties or buckles in the back. Back seats were baggy to allow a man to sit and stand comfortably.
1800-1820 ca. Man’s Everyday Oatmeal Colored Wool Suit With Breeches. Can you picture Jane Austen’s male relatives and friends wearing this? Oatmeal colored double breasted cutaway style coat with velvet collar, steel buttons, rear flap pockets, back vent flanked by stitched down pleats having top and bottom button detail, glazed linen lining. Fall front tan breeches having three button front, small side buttons, back lacing waistband with pocket, four buttons above buttoned cuff, front lined in green linen. via Whitaker Auction whitakerauction.smugmug.com
1800-1820 ca. Man’s Everyday Oatmeal Colored Wool Suit With Breeches. #Regency #Fashion
1800-1820 ca. Man’s Everyday Oatmeal Colored Wool Suit With Breeches. #Regency #Fashion
1800-1820 ca. Man’s Everyday Oatmeal Colored Wool Suit With Breeches. #Regency #Fashion
1800-1820 ca. Man’s Everyday Oatmeal Colored Wool Suit With Breeches. #Regency #Fashion
1800-1820 ca. Man’s Everyday Oatmeal Colored Wool Suit With Breeches. #Regency #Fashion
1800-1820 ca. Man’s Everyday Oatmeal Colored Wool Suit With Breeches. #Regency #Fashion
1800-1820 ca. Man’s Everyday Oatmeal Colored Wool Suit With Breeches. #Regency #Fashion
1800-1820 ca. Man’s Everyday Oatmeal Colored Wool Suit With Breeches. #Regency #Fashion
1805-1820 ca. Combination Shoe and Patten, Or Overshoe. Raises foot off the ground but still elegant enough to be genteel. Very practical but not to everyone’s taste. When Jane Austen and her family and friends went walking in the country, the ground was often very wet due to England’s high rainfall and snowfall so pattens were used to keep shoes and the hems of clothing out of the mud.
Only one of this pair of shoes survives. It effectively combines shoe and patten (overshoe) in one, so raising the foot off the ground but remaining sufficiently elegant to be considered genteel. This type of shoe was very practical but not to everyone’s taste. In 1840 The Shoemaker described it as going out of fashion partly because it looked ‘masculine for the chaster taste of the wearer’. via Victoria and Albert Museum, London, UK. collections.vam.ac.uk
1806 Gentleman’s Daily Outfit, French. Bottle green tailcoat, knee breeches, snowy white cravat, white stockings, flat black shoes. Fashion Plate via Journal des Dames et des Modes, or Costume Parisien. French fashions and Georgian and Regency Era fashions from Great Britain were copied around the world. This is the normal daily outfit for a gentleman in the early 1800s, or in the times of Jane Austen, for daily city and country life. https://books2read.com/SuziLoveFashionMen1800-1819