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Costuming
Overview | Women's Costume
| Men's Costume
Costuming
Overview
The
Great Dickens Christmas Fair is an authentic re-creation of 19th-century
London with all the color, warmth, and merriment of Christmas during
the time of Charles Dickens (1840–1860). The air is filled with
enticing aromas of festive foods and the sounds of street vendors.
Peopling the fair’s bustling lanes are characters from Dickens’
A Christmas Carol, David Copperfield, Nikolas Nickelby and
others, not to mention Mr. Dickens himself.
We
would like all our participants to remember that this is a street
fair and that we are attempting to reconstruct a total environment.
Therefore, we ask each participant to develop a unique and authentic
street character and to be "in character" when on the
"streets of London."
With
that in mind, we are requiring head-to-toe costumes for all participants
during fair hours. No participants should be in the streets out
of costume or in a partial costume.
As
we are creating a total "living history" environment,
we are requiring that costumes be historically accurate and appropriately
accessorized. So when designing your costume, consider your character
and dress according to your character’s occupation and/or class,
what you are doing here at the fair, and the London winter weather.
This
section of our website contains basic overall guidelines as well
as basic information on men's and women's
costuming. If you desire more detailed (and exceptionally good)
information, we highly recommend the book Victorian Costuming
by Janet Winter and Carolyn Savoy (most of the guidelines here have
been pulled from their book). In the book’s pages you will find
all the information you need to construct your own costume. It is
published by Other Times Productions and is available for $10 through
Lacis in Berkeley. You can contact them at (510) 843-7178 or visit
their website at www.lacis.com.
The book and many other resources can be ordered on-line. Victorian
Costuming can also be ordered from Amazon.com.
FABRICS
& COLORS:
Some
of the best fabrics to use are wool, twill, serge, cotton velvet,
satin, taffeta, cotton, and linen.
Colors
were rich and varied – garnet, plum, moss green, gold, gray, beige,
brown, blue, and black. Fabric patterns were interesting and fun,
including plaids, prints, paisleys, stripes, herringbone, and tweeds.
DO
NOT use fluorescent or modern-looking colors or prints, and
avoid obvious polyester fabrics.
THRIFT
SHOP COSTUMING:
You
don’t have to be a great seamstress to make a good costume for the
fair. Many costumes can be created by adapting clothing found in
thrift shops and used-clothing stores. Have fun hunting!
Women
– Petticoats can be made by cutting off the skirts of 1950s evening
gowns or any long, full-skirted dresses. White, long-sleeved blouses
that button up the front or back are great. Look for knitted or
crocheted shawls. Lace doilies make great day caps – just add ribbon
and some silk flowers. And don’t forget gloves!
Men
– Find baggy pants and taper the legs down or remove the cuffs.
Buy an old vest and square off the bottom by folding under the points.
Adapt white shirts by cutting off the fold-over collar right at
the top and finishing off the edge. A sack coat can be made by shortening
an old overcoat to fingertip length.
Movie
and Book Sources for Costuming
The
Dickens Christmas Fair takes place in a very specific time period.
Corsets were the foundation garment of the time (for women and men
a like) and the Bonnet for women and the topper for men was a staple
in every proper gentlepersons wardrobe. The Dickens fair takes place
in what is known historically as the industrial age. Crinolines
and many, many starched petticoats held up the voluminous bell shaped
skirts that were in fashion. We do not allow the high umpire waist
of the 1820’s-30’s and we do not allow the high bustle
of the late 1860’s-80’s. The reason for this is, Charles
Dickens is the headliner in our fair, he is up and walking around
greeting guests as they enjoy our show. We want to maintain a time
in history that he was alive as an adult.
There
are many books and movies that are excellent sources for costume
manners and accent of the time we are portraying. There will soon
be a recommended books and movie list on our website at www.Dickensfair.com
with links to Amazon.com for both performers and guests to utilize.
Below are the lists themselves for a trip to the library or a trip
to the movie rental store.
- The
story of Adele H. (French movie about british events. subtitled)-Women’s
garments and military costume.
- Christmas
Carol {Patrick Stewart} -Fabulous for all classes.
- Black
Adders A Christmas carol (BBC)-worth seeing anyway.
- Oliver!-
The cheesy musical. The first part of this movie has an excellent
crowd scene watch it for just that.
- Oliver
Twist {Elijah Wood} (Disney). The color palette is excellent for
The Dockside area, or Mad Sals.
- BBC
Mini series David Copperfield- A baby Harry Potter plays young
David, very good movie and source for visuals.
- Nicholas
Nickleby (2002)- A wonderful movie full of approvable costume
ideas and colorful characters. Highly recommended for this fair.
These
movies are a sampling of what is visually required for the theatrical
look of the fair. You may also get mannerisms and accent from some
of these movies.
Movies
to avoid as source:
- Titanic-
Edwardian
- Mary
Poppins- Edwardian
- My
Fair lady-Edwardian
- From
Hell- Too late Victorian, Dickens was off this mortal coil.
- The
Wizard of Oz- 'nuf said.
- League
of Extraordinary Gentlemen- Ha
- Gangs
of New York- American and too late
- The
little princess- 1899 too late
- Ideal
Husband- Hourglass period. Waistline too low, silhouette too narrow.
- The
four feathers- Bustle period.
The
above movies are all too late for our time period. My Fair Lady
is good for those who want to learn the speech pattern of both upper
and lower classes.
I have a more comprehensive list with harder to get movies but these
are really great to focus on. There are some movies that have been
purposly left off because either the content was inconsistent or
because the costumes are not as visible for as the rest of the list.
Please feel free to e-mail me with any questions @ costumes@redbarnproductions.org |