The Itinerant Band plays 'Eighth of August'
You are cordially invited to attend three presentations on
18th C. VIRGINIA COLONY FASHIONS: From Bum Roll to Ball Gown

~ Saturday at 11am. & 2pm.~
~Sunday at 2pm.~

Lady Ellen Ruck will present & discuss layering of the fashions of the colony of Virginia and related social customs of a personal nature such as cosmetics, posture & cleanliness.

An informative and enlightening lecture with live model demonstration will be given tentside at Lady Ellen's Fine Wares covering a short history of the Virginia Colony fashions, early grooming and posture, customs, and layering of clothing.

You are invited to watch as our model gets dressed by her ladyservant from bum roll to ballgown including all of the accessories in anticipation of an evening Dance Assembly circa 1770, to be accompanied by a final presentation of
Fine Gentry Weare for Men.
Fashions presented from 1607 to 1820
"The materials of the gentleman's dress were usually rich and expensive--silks and satins, elaborately patterened brocades and velvets, gold and silver thread, lace, and fine linen. Their dress was as rich in color as it was lavish in material. Picture them, scarlet and gold and mutlicolored against a setting of dark forest, flowered clearing, and sluggish tidal rivers. They must have seemed strange, exotic figures as they moved about in their Old World finery, under the blazing Virginia sun, among the log and reeded huts of Jamestown...........even in the heat of midsummer, when comfort demanded the doffing of the doublet and jerkin, doubtless some in the motley company, jealous of their station and its proprieties, still clung to the stifling limits of endurance."*
"It must be remembered , the constantly changing English fashions were not always followed immediately in the colonies......It would not have been unusual in any large gathering to find the mingled fashions of several generations." From here, Cavalier fashion approaching 1700 turns to a more pronounced colonial fashion as we know it today, with the growing wealth of the VA Colony tobacco industry."*
*attribution unknown