Gettmore
Sergeant Major
- Joined
- Jul 5, 2015
- Location
- Western N.C.
May be they were rolled cigarettes.I was surprised to see a couple with smoking cigarettes.
Lubliner.
You'd be surprised how many of the boys are standing around smoking them while formed up waiting to either march out or for the shooting to start.(I'm guilty. lol)I was surprised to see a couple with smoking cigarettes.
Lubliner.
I would be too.You'd be surprised how many of the boys are standing around smoking them while formed up waiting to either march out or for the shooting to start.(I'm guilty. lol)
It's a lot harder when they make us shoulder arms...I would be too.
Lubliner.
Correct me if I error, but did not the ladies wear more of a simple homespun dress during the war ? This was due to the lack of dress material of cotton which was to go into material for the troops as with uniforms and a sign of patriotism . I remember in" Gone with the Wind "when Scarlett took down the drapes to make a rather creative formal dress. To be true did not the women of the South have to be creative when dress material became so expensive and hard to find, courtesy of the Union blockade and cotton mills dedicated to the military department.
For some that expense was offset by wealth. The colonial times had beautifully adorned ladies in expensive garments. These were also passed down through two generations at least as well as the new fashions, many from overseas. Making new clothing among themselves could still be done with fine fabric. It was the homespun poor of both the north and south that suffered the most. Unless you see the 'fall from grace' as a worse tragedy to those in high places, compared to the lowly poor that worked and carved out the wilderness alone. It was nothing more than a step out there front door.Correct me if I error, but did not the ladies wear more of a simple homespun dress during the war ? This was due to the lack of dress material of cotton which was to go into material for the troops as with uniforms and a sign of patriotism . I remember in" Gone with the Wind "when Scarlett took down the drapes to make a rather creative formal dress. To be true did not the women of the South have to be creative when dress material became so expensive and hard to find, courtesy of the Union blockade and cotton mills dedicated to the military department.
You could, in theory, make a dress out of anything, so long as you had enough material. Maybe that "Fancy" print dress was formerly the "good" tablecloth for when company was over...I know many men received shirts from home that were fashioned from a number of things. Tablecloths, bed sheets, drapes, you name it, it was probably used to clothe someone.Correct me if I error, but did not the ladies wear more of a simple homespun dress during the war ? This was due to the lack of dress material of cotton which was to go into material for the troops as with uniforms and a sign of patriotism . I remember in" Gone with the Wind "when Scarlett took down the drapes to make a rather creative formal dress. To be true did not the women of the South have to be creative when dress material became so expensive and hard to find, courtesy of the Union blockade and cotton mills dedicated to the military department.
My dear Sergeant Gettmore, you should know how much your ladies put into getting all gusseed up.@Lubliner, you should know how our ladies get, when they get all gusseed up!
Naw..about 30 mins at the most. The more you do it the faster it gets. Corsett is the most difficult thing to do. And even then, I do my own lacing! It can be done, and I am sure during the war it was.What beautiful dresses. I admire them for getting dressed and participating in the reenactment in the summer heat. It makes one glad to be born in current times. Getting dressed would take half the day.
I was at a reenactment yesterday and I saw all that stuff displayed for sale. It's discouraging just looking at it. It appears that some women choose to just wear pants and help with artillery. That must be according to what the unit allows. That would be the job for me.Naw..about 30 mins at the most. The more you do it the faster it gets. Corsett is the most difficult thing to do. And even then, I do my own lacing! It can be done, and I am sure during the war it was.
There's a reason I'm line infantry...just saying.I was at a reenactment yesterday and I saw all that stuff displayed for sale. It's discouraging just looking at it. It appears that some women choose to just wear pants and help with artillery. That must be according to what the unit allows. That would be the job for me.