SOFT NEWS 100 years of Iconic Irish Fashion

NC Susan

Deceased
http://www.irishtimes.com/life-and-...s-of-irish-fashion-in-10-key-pieces-1.1638744

100 years of Irish fashion in 10 key pieces

With an eye on both tradition and modernity, Emer O'Reilly-Hyland chooses her top fashion items from the past century, one for each decade

While the mini skirt in Britain was personified by Twiggy, Ireland had a very different mini-embodiment. A young civil rights campaigner called Bernadette Devlin was busy wielding a loudhailer and a banner

EmerO'Reilly-Hyland
Sat, Dec 28, 2013


When you think about images of Irish style over the past century, what do you think of? Maybe it’s early Wild-Woman-of-the-West in her red shawl; perhaps it’s Irish Mammy in the good coat and headscarf; or it could be the Country Gent in his tweeds and flat cap.

Irish designers are as modern and forward-thinking as the rest of the fash-pack, but when you think about the most successful, enduring ones – John Rocha, Louise Kennedy, Paul Costelloe to name a few – their use of those traditional wools and tweeds, leathers and silks, gives more than a nod to the Wild Woman, the Mammy and Country Gent.
And so with both tradition and modernity in mind we chart the key looks over the past century.

1910s

The Tara Brooch


image.jpg
While the beau mondes of the Belle Époque donned their feather boas and furs, Irish women dipped back into Celtic myth and pinned their serge suits with precious stone-encrusted brooches. The elaborate pins were inspired by the Tara Brooch, which was created for a medieval chieftain to proclaim his top-o’-the-clan status and, presumably, to save his blushes by keeping his seamless cloak on his manly shoulders.
The Tara Brooch, discovered in 1850 and much copied since, is a stunning, ornate piece, though masculine, almost weapon-like, its long pin strong enough to bore through layers of rough cloth. Perhaps this is why the nationalist organisation, Inghinidhe na hÉireann (Daughters of Ireland), used a Tara Brooch as their membership badge, pointing to an earlier time that they felt represented a pure Irish identity.
When they merged with Cumann na mBan in 1914, the new organisation looked for a fiercer emblem. The Tara Brooch, evocative of the medieval sword, was replaced with the realism of a rifle entwined with the letters CnamB. But many of the old guard preferred the subtlety of the Tara Brooch, including gun-toting Countess Markievicz, pictured here in 1918.



1920s
The shawl


image.jpg

It didn’t start with Pegeen Mike, it was around a lot earlier, but mention the word shawl and Synge’s leading lady, shrouded and lamenting the loss of her playboy, leaps to mind. Pegeen was no fashion plate, but decades later, in the 1990s, the nation was awash with shawls of a different kind.
The pashmina, luxurious, glamorous, many-hued, was embraced by a nation of female race-goers and wedding guests. We had drawers full of them, in every shade, practical in a country known for gale force winds howling across its tracks.
But the shawl, as a historic garment, has another, more hauntingly beautiful image. In the 1920s, new Irish banknotes were issued with a picture of traditional Irish womanhood – Cathleen ní Houlihan, with her wool shawl perfectly framing her beautiful face. The picture was painted by Sir John Lavery in 1923, the model his wife, Hazel; the irony . . . that she was American. Even though this cool foreign beauty won the ironic spot on our banknote, perhaps the roughly honed Pegeen Mike, all anger and emotion, would have been truer to us.


1930s

The Aran sweater


image.jpg

Europe had Romantic Man staring in wonder at the Alps, but in the 1930s, thanks to American documentary filmmaker, Robert Flaherty, romantic Ireland’s Man of Aran took to the stormy seas of the Atlantic Ocean.
Through Flaherty, the fishermen’s rugged faces and rough workwear in serge and wool came to international attention. The Aran jersey, originally handknit from heavy, unbleached wool, evoked a life of hardship and adventure. Each pattern in the Aran has meaning – cable stitching represents fishermen’s ropes; honeycomb denotes bees hard at work; and the diamonds symbolise the network of island fields. It was in the 1930s when the Aran went commercial, as softer merino wool started to be used, sometimes mixed with silk, alpaca or cashmere, to make them lighter and softer, albeit no longer waterproof.
Some 20 or 30 years later, another romantic Irishman, Liam Clancy, along with his Clancy Brothers, transformed the Aran sweater into a must-have fashion item for Irish Americans. Until then any non-fisherman wearing a geansaí was a tourist or beardy mountaineer, but the sight of Liam and the boys strolling on a Greenwich New York sidewalk, to meet his mate Bob Dylan for a pint, brought the Yanks flocking in droves to buy a báinin. Since then, many fashion brands and designers have used Aran stitching for inspiration – Peter O’Brien created an Aran-inspired evening dress studded with rhinestones for Rochas in 1993 (it’s now in the Ulster Museum); even Jean Paul Gaultier dabbled in Aran in 1985, creating a (it has to be said, questionable!) man’s suit with tight trousers and hat.

1940s
The headscarf


image.jpg

In any prevailing image of the traditional Irish mammy, she’s wearing a headscarf. In rayon, chiffon or silk, the headscarf is firmly knotted under her chin. These were the war years when, across the water, the same scarves were knotted atop Land Girls’ heads, while here women battled daily with rationing. Accessible fashion hadn’t been invented yet, so the headscarf was one of the few ways women could express their joie de vivre.
As a fashion statement, the mammy-headscarf, along with the mantilla, disappeared round about 1970 and is one of the few pieces never to have made a comeback.
Yes, scarves are still covetable – you just have to look at the success of Alexander McQueen’s skull-print squares now celebrating their 10th anniversary, or walk into any Hermés store, to know that they are highly desirable, but they are now worn around the neck or fixed to a bag. There’s something about that tight knot under the chin that tightens facial features, suggesting an old narrow-mindedness, totally unjustified, but most unflattering– long may it stay in retirement.

1950s
The tweed suit


image.jpg

While Chanel created her boxy tweed jacket edged with grosgrain – muttering profundities like, “fashion passes, style remains” – Ireland had its own tweedy champions.
Our designers’ insights may have been somewhat more, well, tweedy, like Sybil Connolly’s famous line that women should show their curves not their joints, but they were an emerging force in the international fashion world of the 1950s, and at its core was the tweed suit.
This was the era before disposable clothing, when the good suit was a wardrobe essential, made to last.
We had the best tweed manufacturers in the world, such as Donegal-based Magee and McNutt’s. It was when, in the 1950s, these companies started to work with designers such as Irene Gilbert, Neillí Mulcahy and Ib Jorgensen, creating lighter blends, adding bright silk linings, and fur and leather trims, that the tweed suit, previously worn only to mass on Sundays or “to town”, took on a new glamour.
The glitterati, first ladies and socialites alike, channelled the new elegance sans Chanel. And the literati – Hon Garech Brown, JP Dunleavy et al – brought an aspirational quality to the country squire look. Decades later, the tweed suit still has a celebrity following.

1960s
The mini


image.jpg

While the mini skirt in Britain was personified by Twiggy, all stick legs, gamine haircut and false eyelashes, Ireland had a very different mini-embodiment. A young civil rights campaigner called Bernadette Devlin was busy wielding a loudhailer and a banner. This was the 1960s, when political action was the bastion of middle-aged men in heavy wool suits and overcoats.
Devlin was a powerful voice, perhaps because she was an incongruous figure, for two reasons: her youth and her mini skirts. She was just 21 in 1969 when the Battle of the Bogside took place. This was a key moment in the struggle and, though Devlin was subsequently jailed for four months for inciting a riot, she also went on to become the youngest British MP that same year.
But if this Derry girl was proclaiming into a microphone for all kinds of justice, there was another, singing into a different microphone, for all kinds of everything. As one decade finished and another began, 16-year-old Dana sat atop a high stool and sang for Ireland at Eurovision 1970. She too wore a mini, this time an ivory dress with Celtic designs down the front. Her voice was sweeter than Devlin’s, but no less powerful in gaining world attention.

1970s
The cape


image.jpg

The cape or cloak may have its roots in our historical past, but it was President Hillery and his wife Dr Maeve Hillery who championed it in more modern times. The president opted for a caped coat or shoulder-cape (made by Louis Copeland). Some say it was to give him character: to enhance his lack of charisma, but the effect was more Sherlock Holmes and, given that he often smoked a pipe, well, it was all a bit elementary my dear.
But Maeve had greater fashion sense and more success with the cape. She wore a cape – belted, in gold-flecked, hand-dyed, hand-woven tweed – to her husband’s inauguration in 1976. She chose gold to match the predominantly blue with gold décor of St Patrick’s Hall, Dublin Castle, where the inauguration took place. This was the first of many capes she was to wear as first lady. Capes were highly fashionable garments during 1960s and 1970s, with Ireland’s then leading designers, including Neillí Mulcahy, Ib Jorgensen and Sybil Connolly, including them in their collections.

1980s
The frock


image.jpg

Perhaps it was Diana and Charles’ wedding in 1981, or maybe it was Dallas or Dynasty, but the 1880s was when we embraced full-on, fabulous glamour. Out went the hippy-dippy 1970s, in came taffeta frocks, big hair and glossy make-up.
As high-street shopping took off, the idea that clothes had to be sensible and last for years became old hat. Inspired by a younger breed of fashion icons, we realised that we could all be princesses, even if just for a day. And every princess needs a frock, one in which she can sweep into a room, into the arms of her prince and dance until dawn.
Thus the taffeta years were born, patronised by Roses of Tralee, Eurovision presenters and debutantes from all over Ireland, in their Kelly green or fuchsia or royal blue watermark silk, complete with full skirt, sashed double-bowed waist and puffed sleeve. Thirty years on, at The VIP Style Awards and the IFTAs, the dress is less pouffy, but the princess dream hasn’t changed – intricate up-styles and false tans are testament to that.

1990s
The polo neck


image.jpg

When our first female president needed to be taken seriously among predominantly male international leaders, she chose the polo neck.
To be fair, what she actually chose was a smartly tailored suit, but the problem of what to wear underneath has plagued many a female leader before president Robinson’s inauguration in 1990, and since, with mixed results.
Maggie Thatcher’s pussy bow blouses looked fussy and middle-aged; Angela Merkel’s tendency towards lower necklines with a necklace is distracting and Christine Lagarde’s scarves can, on occasion, outshine her soft-spoken persona. The polo, with its smooth, clean lines, keeps the look simple and says: “I’m in control.” It is also the perfect canvas for a classic neckpiece, which Robinson chose to perfection.
The beginning of the decade, in1990, was also the year that another polo neck received international attention. Sinead O’Connor wore a simple black one when she sang Nothing Compares to You. Its starkness, combined with her shorn head and eyes brimming with tears touched hearts all over the world. The polo, until then the bastion of CND campaigners, intellectuals and RTÉ TV male presenters, had found a new, stylish following.

The Noughties
The racing hat


image.jpg

Picture this: Punchestown, April, the National Hunt Festival; there’s a howling, torrential gale beating across the flat open course, and women with bare legs, short dresses and feathery fascinators are running from tote to parade ring with not a coat or brolly between them.
Fabulous or ridiculous? Well, of course it’s ridiculous in our weather but, still, fancy hats refuse to go away. Our fascination with fascinators seems here to stay, along with best-dressed competitions at race courses all over the land. With prizes like a car or a €10,000 shopping spree, it’s worth going all out, and for that you need a hat.
Everyone knows, you won’t win without one. It’s an Irish phenomenon, undimmed by recession, as fixed in our psyche, as our passion for the track.
 

NC Susan

Deceased



http://www.aransweatermarket.com

The Aran Islands, situated on the very west of Europe, in front of Galway Bay, have given their name to this particular and famous knitting-product. This film represents the story of the Aran Sweater, a garment, hand-knitted since generations in its own typical and traditional Irish style.

Based on its natural tradition, the Aran Sweater became very popular and their pure patterns gave so many inspirations even to the biggest fashion creators.

Note this is a preview of the full video which can be purchased as a DVD from http://www.aransweatermarket.com
 

NC Susan

Deceased
History of Aran Sweaters





aran-sweater-market-history.jpg
Aran Sweater Market on Inis Mór, Aran Islands producing genuine Aran sweaters & using skilled, local Aran sweater knitters
aran-sweater.jpg
The Aran Sweater takes its name from the set of islands where it originated many generations ago, off the West coast of Ireland. The Aran Islands lie at the mouth of Galway Bay, at the mercy of the relentless Atlantic Sea. The Islanders were fishermen and farmers whose lives and livelihoods were deeply intertwined. The Aran Sweater was born of this environment, passed down from generation to generation, and has since become the ultimate symbol of Irish Clan heritage.
History of the Aran Sweater


From its origins, the Aran sweater has been intimately linked to clans and their identities. The many combinations of stitches seen on the garment are not incidental, far from it. They can impart vast amounts of information to those who know how to interpret them. Aran sweaters were, and remain, a reflection of the lives of the knitters, and their families. On the Aran islands, sweater patterns were zealously guarded, kept within the same clan throughout generations. These Aran sweaters were often used to help identify bodies of fishermen washed up on the beach following an accident at sea. An official register of these historic patterns has been compiled, and can be seen in the Aran Sweater Market on the Aran Islands.
About the Aran Sweater

heritage-aran-sweaters.jpg
islanders-aran-sweater.jpg

The Aran Sweater has many attributes which made it suitable clothing for the island's community of fishermen and farmers. It is water repellent, not allowing the rain to penetrate the sweater thus keeping the wearer dry. An Aran sweater can absorb 30% of its weight in water before feeling wet. The natural wool fibre used in the sweaters is breathable, drawing water vapour away from the skin and releasing it into the air, thus helping the body to maintain an ideal temperature. Most importantly, of course, an Aran sweater kept the wearer warm on the cold days and nights at sea or on the farm. Wool has an excellent insulating capacity due to the high volume of air in it, and this helps protect the wearer from excessive cold and heat.
Aran sweater stitches - meanings & symbols

spinning-aran-sweater.jpg

As a craft, the Aran Sweater continues to fascinate audiences around the world. A finished Aran sweater contains approximately 100,000 carefully constructed stitches, and can take the knitter up to sixty days to complete. It can contain any combination of stitches, depending on the particular clan pattern being followed. Many of the stitches used in the Aran Sweater are reflective of Celtic Art, and comparisons have been drawn between the stitches and patterns found at Neolithic burial sites such as Newgrange in Co. Meath.
Each stitch carries its own unique meaning, a historic legacy from the lives of the Island community many years ago. The Cable Stitch is a depiction of the fisherman's ropes, and represents a wish for a fruitful day at sea. The Diamond Stitch reflects the small fields of the islands. These diamonds are sometimes filled with Irish moss stitch, depicting the seaweed that was used to fertilise the barren fields and produce a good harvest. Hence the diamond stitch is a wish for success and wealth. The Zig Zag Stitch, a half diamond, is often used in the Aran Sweaters, and popularly represents the twisting cliff paths on the islands. The Tree of Life is one of the original stitches, and is unique to the earliest examples of the Aran knitwear. It again reflects the importance of the clan, and is an expression of a desire for clan unity, with long-lived parents and strong children.
Aran Sweaters today

aran-sweater-market-knitters.jpg

Today, the demand for the Aran Sweater continues to grow. The lack of skilled knitters, and the economic gains to be had from machine-production of the sweaters, has resulted in a huge fall in the number of hand-knits available. Hand knit Aran Sweaters have become rare and valuable.
They are highly sought after for their quality, their history, and the clan heritage they represent. Despite the huge increase in fashion goods available in Ladies Aran Knitwear, Mens Aran Knitwear and Childrens Aran Knitwear, the Aran Sweater remains an item of timeless beauty, synonymous with pride in an Irish heritage.
As the craft spreads far beyond its humble origins on the wind ravaged islands of the west coast of Ireland, so too does its recognition as a fine work of art and an emblem of Irish Clan identity.


http://www.clanarans.com/history-of-aran-sweaters
 

Dusty Lady

Veteran Member
Loved this thread, wonderful break from the realities of life about now. I wear my Aran sweater still and have in my jewelry box my very own Tara brooch, although much newer than the one in the article.
 

kittyknits

Veteran Member
I've knit an Aran sweater every so often for 45 years. My third knitting project was an Aran when I was in college; I only allowed myself to knit when my studying was done. I still have a picture of myself 6 months before I was married wearing that sweater.

I love Arans.
 

Freeholder

This too shall pass.
You know, those "mammy" headscarves may not look very fashionable, but they sure are warm and comfortable! My mother used to wear one back when I was little (I was born in 1957), and once in a while I will wear one. They protect your ears and neck from wind better than most hats or even a lot of hoods.

Kathleen
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
Loved the video!

Kathleen, when my Mom passed last year, I came across her head scarf. The pattern brought back so many pleasant memories.
 

Genevieve

working on it
I managed to save one of my mom's scarves from the sib's manic clearing of her things after she died. It was the one she wore in the spring and it was made up of pastel pink,blue and then white. I only keep it in with my other scarves and pashminas ( which I use every winter).

I would absolutely LUV a REAL Irish sweater. When we went to the beach over in Delaware I saw a store that was selling all Irish stuff but we never made in there.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Aran sweaters are wonderful (I am knitting one now) but a lot of the stuff in that article sadly does not pan out when you actually do the research - as far as anyone can tell they are a little more than 100 years old (though fisherman's ganseys which are less complicated are older) and seem to have been introduced by sisters who lived in Canada, picked up the idea of cable knitting around the late 1800's and moved back and brought the style with them.

Very quickly it became obvious the tourist potentials of telling people how these were old clan signs, how fisherman's bodies could be recognized by traditional "clan" patterns on their sweaters etc (nothing like a little death to spice up the romance of something like this).

By the 1940's, people all over Ireland were knitting these for sale and paid practically nothing, the number of older men I have met while knitting who come over and say "I did that as a boy, my whole family did, and would you believe it? We got one pound per each jumper (sweater) complected, I tell you those jumpers got at least 25 pound a piece in New York Shops at the time, but one pound that's all we ever saw."

Even those machines largely took over the industry you can still get handknit ones today from a number of sources - a good machine one costs between 70 and 100 dollars new (up to 10 to 15 in a charity shop) and hand knits run about 300 dollars. After years of not being able to get yarn without spinning it, I can now get good Irish wool for between 50 and 100 dollars a kilo and make my husband's sweaters (it is once again starting to be cheaper to knit than buy them).

Personally in terms of Irish fashions, I am a lot more interested in what people actually wear than what gets flagged on the "high" street - I've noticed for example that farmers for generations don't wear Aran sweaters nearly so much as they wear version of Fair Isle sweaters (made popular in Scotland but also knit and sold in Ireland) which are the ones with lots of little color patterns that change every few lines. This is actually my favorite type of knitting, because it looks so complicated but really isn't - I was at a farm auction and even noticed that the putting on of the colorful sweater seemed to be almost a mark of man-hood, especially for young men who intended to into farming, along with the wellies (rubber boots) and heavy rain gear; sometimes a vest rather than a sweater was worn and the older men were almost all wearing them, with a few Aran style sweaters mixed in (almost all looked well worn).

The silly hat craze I did notice at weddings I have gone too, and it makes the ladies look like they are trying out for a part in a spoof UFO movies (the are beyond silly) thankfully that trend seems to be going away, replaced by the much more practical knit hats (many with ear flaps) and other items the knitting revival has brought back in style.

At least people are knitting here now, when we moved here 17 years ago - the art was dying and within three years nearly every yarn shop had closed, I actually ended up ordering yarns from the UK and the US on a regular basis, especially if I wanted wool. For a short time, there were no actual Irish wool mills selling to the public - that has all changed now and knitting is everywhere. It didn't take the full 20 years the cycle usually takes because knitting became "in" in the US about the time I left in the mid-90's (for years I was pretty much alone with the knitting needles, even in California) and it rapidly spread back to the UK and by 2004 or so was picking up again in Ireland. We now have a yarn store in the nearest town again and three places there sell it (though only one has real wool, everything else is cheap acrylics), the Eastern Europeans want real wool and they do know it is warmer than cheap petroleum based yarns.

When buying an Aran sweater (or yarn to make your own) be careful to make sure it is wool and not a mixture, because a lot of the commercial sweaters do cut costs by using synthetics and while some blends are OK, a 20 percent wool sweater is not going to keep you very warm or dry but an 80 percent wool one probably will.
 

GunGirl

Contributing Member
I recently knit my first Aran sweater. 100% wool in a natural grey, for my husband. His is a little different in that it has a hood, but he picked out the pattern. It took me 50 hours to knit it. Even if they really aren't that old of a style, I think they are beautiful, and I love a knitting challenge!

I still haven't ventured into Fair Isle-- yet.
 
Top