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History of Clothing and Their Major Characteristics and Appopriate Projects

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History Of Clothing And Their Major Characteristics And Appopriate Projects

The Middle East during the late Stone Age. There is evidence that suggests that humans
may have begun wearing clothing somewhere from 100,000 to 500,000 years ago.
Primitive sewing needles have been found and are dated to around 40,000 years ago.
Dyed flax fibers which have been found in a prehistoric cave in the Republic of Georgia
are old some 36,000 years. Some 25,000 years ago the Venus figurines started appearing
in Europe, that were depicted with clothing. They had basket hats or caps, belts at the
waist and a strap of cloth above the breast. First material used for clothing that was not
leather but textile was probably felt. Nålebinding, which is another early textile method -
a type of precursor of knitting, appeared somewhere in 6500 BC as some evidence tells.
At a Neolithic site at Çatalhöyük in Anatolia were found oldest known woven textiles of
the Near East. They were used for wrapping the dead. Flax was cultivated from c. 8000
BC in the Near East but sheep are bred much later in 3000BC. Cotton was used for
clothing in Ancient India from 5th millennium BC. Linen cloth was made in Ancient
Egypt from the Neolithic period. Flax was grown even earlier. Ancient Egypt also knew
about different spinning techniques like the drop spindle, hand-to-hand spinning, and
rolling on the thigh as well as about horizontal ground loom and vertical two-beam loom
which came from Asia. Ancient Egyptians also used linen for bandages for
mummification and for kilts and dresses. The earliest proof of silk production in China
dates from between 5000 and 3000 BC and is in the form of cocoon of the domesticated
silkworm which was cut in half by a sharp knife. Japan started with weaving in Jōmon
period which lasted from 12,000 BC to 300BC. There is evidence of pottery figurines that
were depicted with clothing and a piece of cloth made from bark fibers dating from
5500BC. Some primitive needles were also found as well as hemp fibers and pattern
imprints on pottery which proves existence of weaving techniques in Japan at that time.
Silk Road was very important for exchange of luxury textiles between East and West. It
helped in the development of the great civilizations of China, Egypt, Mesopotamia,
Persia, the Indian subcontinent and Rome that traded along the route. Clothing History
Different cultures approached to the clothing in different ways under the influence of
climate, fashion, religion, and ecosystem. Under the same influences those cultures
changed clothing throughout the history. Read about clothing history here. Textile
History Textiles were invented when humans needed them and some of them were
invented by different cultures that never had any mutual contacts. Some were invented
with one intent only to be later used for completely different one.
History of textile is wide and colorful. Making Clothing Knitting and weaving are two
very interesting achievements of human race. Nobody knows who was the first who got
the idea to make fabrics in that way but we know that the idea was brilliant. Clothing in
the ancient world Ancient civilizations like Greece and Rome favored wide, unsewn
lengths of fabric from which they constructed their clothing (fabric was expensive and
they didn’t want to cut it). Ancient Greek clothing was made of lengths of rectangular
wool or linen cloth which was secured at the shoulders with ornamented pins and belted
with a sash. Women wore loose robe called peplos, men cloak called chlamys while both
men and women wore chiton - a type of tunic which was short to the knees for men and
longer for women. The toga of ancient Rome which was worn by free Roman men
citizens was also an unsewn length of wool cloth. Under the toga they wore a simple
tunic which was made from two simple rectangles joined at the shoulders and sides.
Roman women wore the draped stola or a tunic that had length to the ground. During the
Iron Age that lasted from 1200 BC to 500 AD women of northwestern Europe wore wool
dresses, tunics and skirts which were held in place with leather belts and metal brooches
or pins. Men wore breeches with leg wrappers for protections and long trousers. They
also wore caps and shawls made from animal skin and soft laced shoes made from
leather. During Medieval times the Byzantines made and exported very richly patterned
cloth. Expensive variant was woven and embroidered while cheaper, intended for lower
classes was resist-dyed and printed. They wore tunics, or long chitons over which they
wore dalmatica, which is a heavier and shorter type of tunica or long cloaks. At the same
time look of European clothing depended on whether people who wore it identified with
the old Romanized population or the new invaders such are Franks, Anglo-Saxons or
Visigoths. Men of the invading peoples wore short tunics with belts and visible trousers,
hose or leggings. In 12th and 13th century Europe clothing remained simple. In 13th
century dyeing and working of wool improves and Crusaders bring with them craft of
silk. Fashion begins in Europe in 14th century.
In Renaissance Europe wool remained the most popular fabric for all classes but the linen
and hemp were also used. More complex clothes were made and urban middle class joins
the fashion that was set by higher class and royalties.
Early Modern Europe from 16th century sees even more complex fashion with ruffs,
passementerie and needlelace. Enlightenment introduces two types of clothing: “full
dress” worn at Court and for formal occasions, and “undress” which are everyday,
daytime clothes.
Full dress almost disappeared by the end of the 18th century. Industrial revolution brings
machines that spin, weave and sew and with that produce fabric that is of better quality,
faster made and has lower price. Production moves from small cottage production to
fabrics with assembly lines. 20th century invents synthetic fibers that is cheaper than
natural and which is mixed with many natural fibers.

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