href="@public@vhost@g@gutenberg@html@files@42682@[email protected]#fig052" class="pginternal" tag="{http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml}a">55
53. |
A hunting hat with complete lacing inside |
56 |
54. |
A disc of leather |
57 |
55. |
The disc perforated and the lace inserted |
57 |
56. |
The lace tightened to form a crown |
57 |
57. |
The ends of the lace tied as a bow inside |
57 |
58. |
A bow fastened to the lining of a lady’s hat |
58 |
59. |
Plumes on the left side |
58 |
60. |
The red Hungarian cap, which was the forerunner of the busby |
59 |
61. |
A busby (of the Hon. Artillery Company) in which the cap is a vestige only |
59 |
62. |
A fireman’s helmet (of the ancient Greek type) |
60 |
63. |
Buttons so arranged that the broad brim of a hat can be fastened to the crown, thus forming a temporary “cock” (Hudibras, after Hogarth) |
60 |
64. |
A modern boot decorated with perforations made in the leather |
63 |
65. |
An ornamented Roman shoe, of two thicknesses |
63 |
66. |
A Roman shoe of open-work leather |
63 |
67. |
A hide shoe of pre-Roman type from Ireland (after Fairholt) |
64 |
68. |
The original top boot with the upper part temporarily turned down |
65 |
69. |
The modern top boot in which the upper part can no longer be turned up |
66 |
70. |
Puttees |
66 |
71. |
Leg bandages of a royal personage at the end of the tenth century (after Fairholt) |
67 |
72. |
A stocking with clocks |
68 |
73. |
An embroidered stocking showing the further evolution of the clock (date 1900) |
69 |
74. |
An open-work stocking of 1905 |
69 |
75. |
A shawl used as a kilt by a chieftain of Denmark in the bronze stage of culture (after Worsaae) |
73 |
76. |
A simple dress in the form of a petticoat from an Egyptian figure of the Sixth Dynasty (3500 B.C.), from the Myers collection in Eton College Museum |
74 |
77. |
A Korean servant (after Hough) |
75 |
78. |
A short kilt |
76 |
79. |
A barbarian soldier wearing characteristic trousers (from a diptych of St. Paul, after Marriott) |
78 |
80. |
A Saxon military man wearing wide trousers (from the Harleian MS., No. 603, after Fairholt) |
79 |
81. |
A peasant woman of Champéry wearing trousers |
80 |
82. |
A German Hussar of 1808 |
81 |
83. |
The crest on a modern signet ring |
85 |
84. |
Sir Geoffrey Loutterell and the ladies of his family, showing the extent to which armorial bearings were worn in the middle of the fourteenth century. From a psalter, made for Sir Geoffrey (after Fairholt) |
85 |
85. |
The crest and surcoat of Henry, first Duke of Lancaster, A.D. 1347. From the brass to Sir Hugh Hasting at Elsyng, Norfolk (after Charles Boutell) |
86 |
86. |
The helmet and crest of the Black Prince. From “Vetusta Monumenta” (after St. John Hope) |
88 |
87. |
The shield of the Black Prince. From “Vetusta Monumenta” (after St. John Hope) |
89 |
88. |
The surcoat or jupon of the Black Prince. From “Vetusta Monumenta” (after St. John Hope) |
89 |
89. |
The postilion of a Lord Mayor of London, wearing a crest upon his cap, and a coat of arms upon his sleeve (copied by permission from a plate published by the John Williamson Co., Ltd.) |
92 |
90. |
A baby’s glove without separate fingers |
95 |
91. |
The back of a woollen glove showing the three vestiges known as “points” |
96 |
92. |
A modern kid glove showing the fourchettes or pieces between the fingers, which form three pointed V’s |
97 |
93. |
Queen Elizabeth’s coronation glove, showing the stitching carried down on to the back. (From a photograph by the courtesy of Messrs. Fownes Brothers and Co.) |
97 |
94. |
The glove of Anne, Queen Consort of James I, showing the embroidery on the fingers, which is the ancestor of the modern “points.” (From a photograph, by the courtesy of Messrs. Fownes Brothers and Co.) |
99 |
95. |
A silk lace with simple metal tags |
101 |
96. |
Ornamental metal tags on a velvet neck ribbon |
101 |
97. |
A simple safety-pin |
102 |
98. |
An Etruscan brooch or fibula, resembling a safety-pin. (In the collection of Major W. J. Myers in Eton College Museum) |
103 |
99. |
The safety-pin in the waistband |
103 |
100. |
The safety-pin grown larger and used for fastening on a hat |
104 |
101. |
A muff-chain |
105 |
102. |
A hawker, illustrating the primitive way of carrying a burden |
107 |
103. |
A courier-bag supported by a baldric |
107 |
104. |
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