The recycling of cotton feed sacks into apparel and household items was a common practice across rural America during the first half of the twentieth century. This creative recycling of a utilitarian fabric has, until recently, been omitted from histories of American fashion because the practice centered on fabric use rather than new garment styles, and because the farm wife of rural America was not considered to be a source of fashion inspiration. As an element of material culture, the clothing and clothing practices of rural populations reflect the life and times of the era to the same extent as that of the general population. However, it is the activities of these farm wives, clothing their families in feed sacks, that offer a view of li...
In the context of a rapidly changing world, Rachel Worth explores the ways in which the clothing of ...
In 1887 the Plains photographer Solomon Butcher met the David Hilton family in Custer County, Nebras...
Review of: Families and Farmhouses in Nineteenth Century America: Vernacular Design and Social Chang...
During the Great Depression, rural American women began re-using empty textile bags used to package ...
A modest temporary exhibit, FEED BAGS AS FASHION, opened in the National Museum of American History ...
During the Great Depression, rural American women began re-using empty textile bags used to package ...
Women of the World War II home front adjusted to war related fabric shortages and rationing through ...
sack- noun a large bag made of a strong material such as burlap, thick paper, or plastic, used for s...
This thesis examines the textile work and related fashion ephemera and attitudes of rural women in t...
Rural women relied on their knowledge of fabric despite rapid changes in the women’s clothing, texti...
Traditionally, research over the Dust Bowl has focused on the causes of the ecological disaster and ...
Fashion is an ever-changing expression of values, culture, beauty preferences and technological adva...
This study analyzes eleven collections created, saved, and preserved by rural Iowa women, during the...
This dissertation focusses on the dialogue within the rural community and between the country and th...
My central question is; why did rural women\u27s fashion change between 1760 and 1840 from simple pi...
In the context of a rapidly changing world, Rachel Worth explores the ways in which the clothing of ...
In 1887 the Plains photographer Solomon Butcher met the David Hilton family in Custer County, Nebras...
Review of: Families and Farmhouses in Nineteenth Century America: Vernacular Design and Social Chang...
During the Great Depression, rural American women began re-using empty textile bags used to package ...
A modest temporary exhibit, FEED BAGS AS FASHION, opened in the National Museum of American History ...
During the Great Depression, rural American women began re-using empty textile bags used to package ...
Women of the World War II home front adjusted to war related fabric shortages and rationing through ...
sack- noun a large bag made of a strong material such as burlap, thick paper, or plastic, used for s...
This thesis examines the textile work and related fashion ephemera and attitudes of rural women in t...
Rural women relied on their knowledge of fabric despite rapid changes in the women’s clothing, texti...
Traditionally, research over the Dust Bowl has focused on the causes of the ecological disaster and ...
Fashion is an ever-changing expression of values, culture, beauty preferences and technological adva...
This study analyzes eleven collections created, saved, and preserved by rural Iowa women, during the...
This dissertation focusses on the dialogue within the rural community and between the country and th...
My central question is; why did rural women\u27s fashion change between 1760 and 1840 from simple pi...
In the context of a rapidly changing world, Rachel Worth explores the ways in which the clothing of ...
In 1887 the Plains photographer Solomon Butcher met the David Hilton family in Custer County, Nebras...
Review of: Families and Farmhouses in Nineteenth Century America: Vernacular Design and Social Chang...