Beginning in April, the Museum of the Rhode Island School of Design in the US will be holding an exhibition of  clothing drawn from its archives and borrowed from sources around the world – including our own, inimitable Guy Hills and customers of cutter Kathryn Sargent.

I’ve picked out a few interesting pieces from the archives – more contemporary pieces readers will be familiar with.


This bespoke suit (above and top) was made for actor and writer Michael Strange (pseudonym of Blanche Oelrichs). Already breaking the mould when she was married to John Barrymore, Strange described the pleasure the couple enjoyed in swapping details of men’s and women’s clothing: “Jack and I dressed in a manner never affected before or since. Pleatings and flutings appeared on his trousers, duplications of the ones on my skirt. … He considerably lowered his shirt collars, of which I instantly had a dozen copies made.” Strange wore this suit by Brooks Uniform Company in her everyday life and when playing the title role of Napoleon II in L’Aiglon. The suit’s traditional construction is offset by a silk organdy dickie and trompe l’oeil bow tie.


This coat is one of few surviving garments from the age of Beau Brummell’s Regency London. A wool greatcoat from London tailor John Weston, who made for Brummell and George IV, it was deposited in the vaults of Coutts Bank and thus survived over 100 years in pristine condition.


An unlined suit worn by WF Whitehouse around 1910 and made by Hoar & Co of Bombay out of a double-cloth cotton. A dandy-explorer, Whitehouse dressed in a manner that constantly reminded people of his adventures to foreign territories. He was a pioneer of free hot-air ballooning and on one trip reached Bombay, where he likely celebrated with the commissioning of this jacket.


And a rather exotic banyan worn by George IV when Prince of Wales in the 1780s. A banyan is a quilted and printed robe, cut loosely and used in the same way as a house coat or dressing gown. Worn in parts of India and the Middle East.

Also: 


Shirts made by T Hodgkinson, a London maker, for Francis Carolan around 1900. In silk and cotton


Pantaloons worn by Edward Carrington around 1820, in wool broadcloth with brass buttons

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Unknown

In the article, there is a mention of Gieves & Hawkes as offering fully canvassed. That is true… but not for RTW. These are glued/fused.

True regarding Huntsman though.

Anonymous

I believe G&H RTW is all half-canvassed.

Anonymous

A great article, some more eccentricities please!
Also two questions:
Would it now be too pretentious to wear a house coat, or even a banyan?
Also I am off to Jodhpur today, any tailor that sticks out worth getting a few shirts made at? I may get a Nehru vest made as well
G

Anonymous

What a shame, not even worth getting a few cheap shirts made for the cheap price?
G