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  1. A fashion for mi-parti or parti-coloured garments made of two contrasting fabrics, one on each side, arose for men in mid-century, and was especially popular at the English court. Sometimes just the hose would be different colours on each leg.

  2. Sep 11, 2017 · Menswear. Wikipedia writes of fourteenth-century fabrics: “Woodblock printing of cloth was known throughout the century, and was probably fairly common by the end; this is hard to assess as artists tended to avoid trying to depict patterned cloth due to the difficulty of doing so.

  3. Nov 23, 2019 · The outer garment worn over doublet and hose, usually a houppelande, was the focus of men’s fashion. Men’s houppelandes were constructed with gores widening to the hemline, which varied from full-length to mid-calf (a style called “bastard length”) to knee-length or above (Van Buren and Wieck 307).

  4. 1200–1300 in European fashion. 13th century clothing featured long, belted tunics with various styles of surcoats or mantle in various styles. The man on the right wears a gardcorps, and the one on the left a Jewish hat. Women wore linen headdresses or wimples and veils, c. 1250.

  5. Men wore either a loose belted tunic or a tighter, more form-fitting one. A form-fitting tunic featured slits in the skirt to allow ease of leg movement. The 1200s saw a rise in what we might call fashion, or even fads.

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  6. Jan 17, 2024 · January 17, 2024. • 10 min read. Plague and war might have blighted the 14th century, but men's couture sparked a fashion revolution. Out went the baggy, amorphous robes that had been...

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  8. Aug 7, 2019 · In the 1300s, it became the fashion for people to wear shifts, or undertunics, that had longer sleeves and lower hemlines than their tunics, and therefore were plainly visible. Usually, among the working classes, these shifts would be woven from hemp and would remain undyed; after many wearings and washings, they would soften up and lighten in ...

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