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Colonial Day
Resources
from Claude Moore Colonial Farm
How to turn an old shirt
into a colonial shirt
Time to complete:
30 minutes
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Supplies:
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Men's old dress shirt
Choose an old shirt that is white, brown, blue, red, checked, or striped.
Don't choose any really bright or neon colors.
Scissors
3 Buttons
In the 18th Century a working man's buttons would have been made
of horn, bone, wood, or pewter. A dress shirt might have had thread
buttons. Choose buttons about 5/8" wide in brown, off-white,
or white metal. Eighteenth Century buttons usually had 2 holes,
not four, or were metal with a loop on the back. Fabric glue or
fusible web, a sewing machine, or a needle and thread.
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Background:
In
the 18th Century, shirts were used the way shirts are today, but
they were also used as underwear, and to sleep in. Dress shirts
were white and made of fine bleached linen or cotton. They might
have ruffles made of lace or linen at the neck and on the cuffs.
Work shirts were made of coarser, cheaper material. They were usually
white or the color of unbleached linen, but they were sometimes
dyed, or checked, or striped.
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Directions:
1. Remove pockets, buttons, and any labels.
2. Cut the points off of the collar to make it rectangular.
Colonial collars were often rectangular. Sew or glue the cut edges
of the collar together.
3. Cut the rounded edges off of the bottom of the shirt
to make it straight. Leave the tails as long as possible. Colonial
shirts were long. They came down to the middle of a man's thigh.
Glue or sew the hem at the bottom of the shirt.
4. From the bottom of the shirt, cut 5 or 6 inches up each
side seam. There is no need to finish the edges if the cut is made
between two rows of stitching.
5. Cut the cuffs to a width of about 1 ½ inches. Glue or
sew the edge of the cuff.
6. Glue or sew the front opening shut from the bottom up
to the second button hole. Do not let the front button holes show.
7. Sew a button on each of the cuffs and at the neck. Clip
the buttonholes if necessary to make them a little larger.
8. Tie a kerchief around the neck loosely, and wear the
shirt out to hide the front of the trousers.
Note: The fabric
which has been cut from the shirt is in this photograph to give
a rough guide as to how much has been removed - and from where
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Farm
6310 Georgetown Pike, McLean, Virginia 22101 703-442-7557
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