Read Online 20thCentury Fashion The Complete Sourcebook John Peacock 9780500015643 Books

Read Online 20thCentury Fashion The Complete Sourcebook John Peacock 9780500015643 Books



Download As PDF : 20thCentury Fashion The Complete Sourcebook John Peacock 9780500015643 Books

Download PDF 20thCentury Fashion The Complete Sourcebook John Peacock 9780500015643 Books

Provides detailed drawings and information on women's fashions, underwear, and accessories

Read Online 20thCentury Fashion The Complete Sourcebook John Peacock 9780500015643 Books


"I've been needing this book for decades, now finally was able to get it! Thanks, now on with the Creativity! (Stealing and reproducing all the great styles!)"

Product details

  • Hardcover 240 pages
  • Publisher Thames & Hudson; 1st Edition edition (September 1, 1993)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 0500015643

Read 20thCentury Fashion The Complete Sourcebook John Peacock 9780500015643 Books

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20thCentury Fashion The Complete Sourcebook John Peacock 9780500015643 Books Reviews :


20thCentury Fashion The Complete Sourcebook John Peacock 9780500015643 Books Reviews


  • I am very disappointed with this item. I bought it on the strength of Peacock's Shoes The Complete Sourcebook, and the fact that Thames & Hudson was the publisher (another reputation bites the dust). One problem that both books share is that the title doesn't really convey the scope. I realize that it is hard to define vague areas, but this is more or less Western European and American fashion, it is only about women's clothing, not even the 2003 reprint covers the entire 20th century (it's 1900-1990), and "complete sourcebook" is a bit of an exaggeration. Christian Lacroix claims in the Preface that the fashions of the 1990s are too diverse to be covered. How "fashion" is defined is one of the chief problems with the book.

    The basic plan is a good one fashions for various occasions along with their associated underwear and accessories. The book is broken up into sections covering 5 years (e.g.,1900-1904) Each section has a page each of haute couture, accessories (usually shoes, purses, hats, wraps, and oddly enough, tops such as blouses and sweaters), leisure wear, underwear, evening wear, bridal fashions and two pages of day wear. Coats, jewelry, wigs, gloves, etc., are covered only sporadically. All are illustrated in color by 1100 drawings of a number of garments with dates; only the haute couture are attributed to specific designers. Apparently in order to save pages, the keys to the illustrations, with detailed information about the items, are grouped together in 10 year increments. I find this a bit annoying, but I understand the motive. This is followed by a very useful section with silhouettes for the beginning and ending of each five year period, with description of typical details e.g. fabrics, trimmings, necklines. This is followed by brief vitas of designers and a bibliography.

    There are some oddities in this admirable plan. I was born in 1953, so I remember several decades. Slips start vanishing from the illustrations in the 1960s, even though Peacock still shows plenty of dresses, and are pretty much absent in the 1980s. I suspect more women wore slips later dresses and skirts were actually more popular than a decade earlier. Contrary to the impression conveyed in the drawings, women did not stop carrying purses in 1970-1974 and 1985-1990.

    Worse, Peacock has ignored some of the major trends in 20th century clothing blue jeans and denim; the decline of hats; and the rise of the woman's business suit. Even given that a book of this size can't really be "complete" this is a major failing.

    The industrial revolution made clothing relatively cheap even the poor could afford new clothing and affect designs. As Christian Lacroix says in the Preface "... the more the century progresses, the greater the gulf between magazine images of fashion and what is actually being worn on the street." Peacock seems to ignore this. Lacroix continues less accurately "There is no risk of that with this book ... the every day is ... side by side with fashion's idealized images."

    Peacock himself says "As dictated by the couturier, fashionable dress represents an ideal which few women attain but to which many aspire." He states that this book is his impression of the "ideal". I question defining fashion as strictly determined by couturiers or designers. They are a phenomenon of only the last couple of centuries; fashion existed long before they did. Historically, fashionable clothing was available only to the fairly wealthy and was an indication of their status. Now more people can afford designer clothes, but choose not to wear them. Bell-bottom jeans were as much a fashion of the 1960s-1970s as mini-skirts. Further, jeans were later created by some of the fashion designers that Peacock lists.

    There are only hints that hats were pretty much abandoned except for cold weather and, in some cases, religious venues. Someone once described this as the greatest revolution in Western costume! When I was young, most women would never have gone to church or anything other than the most casual event without gloves and a hat. If they didn't have a hat, many put a handkerchief on their head. Now it is very common for women to be bare-headed.

    Lastly, the business suit, particularly the knee-length versions that have probably been the most common, are virtually ignored.

    The variety of types of garments are a major strength of this book, and some people may want it for that reason. I think it is a very poor representation of how people, even those consciously following some fashion, actually dressed. I suspect that many people with a great interest in the fashion of these years have this information already, and it is questionable as a sole, basic source. Certainly I wouldn't suggest that a novelist, say, rely on this as a representation of clothing in the last half of the century at least. One wanting typical clothing would do better to consult Tom Tierney's American Family paperdoll series (American Family of the 1940s Paper Dolls, etc.)
  • I purchase this book after referencing a friend's copy. This book is an excellent reference source and I love all the visuals.
  • Thank you, great resource book.
  • I am a professional costume designer for theater and I LOVE this book. It has accessories for every era and is beautifully illustrated.
  • I purchased this book after referencing a friend's copy. This book is an excellent reference source for theatrical costuming. I love all the visuals.
  • I've been needing this book for decades, now finally was able to get it! Thanks, now on with the Creativity! (Stealing and reproducing all the great styles!)
  • NICE
  • I generally don't like too much text in these books but I'm always fascinated of John Peacocks talent and massive body of work- many nice drawings of costumes and accessories. Recommended

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