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Thursday, 9 June 2022

ON SALE HERE - Sepia Saturday

 A old fashioned shop floor displaying women's wear is the prompt photograph from this week's Sepia Saturday blog - see the end of this post. 
 
Cue for me to hunt out vintage photographs and fashion advertisements  from my local heritage group Auld Earlston in the Scottish Borders  - and to jump forward over  100 years to dress  displays in Austria.
 
 
 
Lochhead's watchmaker & jeweller on Earlston High Street, c.1900
Look at the right hand window for that unusual term "cyclealities".
 A crowded shop window of the Co-op store in Earlston. c.1950


Another  crowded window display from Weatherly's stationer, newsagent, printer  and post office. Members of the Weatherly family down the generations ran the business for over 100 years.
 
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Fashion advertisements  took centre stage on the  front page of  in a short lived local newspaper  "The Earlston Comet" of 1891 - too early for photographs, but promotions by the drapers and  clothiers in the village, give us  a good description of what the well dressed man or woman would be wearing in the late 19th century. 


Thomas Clendinnen & Sons, Drapers, Milliners and Clothiers announced their:

ANNUAL AUTUMN SALE,
For the whole of  their stock, replete with all the latest novelties in Plain and Diagonal Serges, Homespun, Twist, Knicker Checked and Striped, Dress Tweeds,
Ladies Jackets, Braemar and Russian Cloaks,
Trimmed Hat and Bonnets in Newest Style
White, Scarlet and Shetland Flannels
 Gentleman's Tweed Suits - Made to Measure- From 37s.6p 
New Melton and Diagonal Overcoats from 30s. 

All garments carefully made and finished -  Perfect Fit Guaranteed. 
 
 
Also in the field of fashion was David Wallace,  with this  advertisement:

"An Immense and Magnificent Collection of every New and Fashionable  Dress Material....which for Variety, Superior Quality, Good Taste and Moderate Prices is unequalled in Earlston.Tweeds in Cheviot, Homespun, Harris and Grampian makes, latest styles and newest mixtures.  Black materials in great variety.
The latest novelties in Millinery, Flowers, Feathers etc.  Bonnets composed of Velvet and Jet, from 10s.6d to 25s.  The latest novelty in hats is Gladys in French Beaver, trimmed with Feathers.  All orders for this Department made up in the most Fashionable and Tasteful Manner." 
Note the reference to "black materials" - at a time when formal mourning wear was still the custom.  Somehow the name "Gladys" does not quite conjure up an image of a French beaver hat with feathers!   

Draper David Wallace was listed in the 1891 census as at the High Street with his wife Ruth, two young children Robert and Ruth, and  eldest son Henry described as a  Draper's Apprentice.   

Miller's Drapers Establishment, offered competition with the claim:  
"The largest and cheapest collection  of Autumn and Winter drapery  goods to be seen in any warehouse in the South of Scotland. 
The constant desire is to supply goods of Reliable Quality
 suitable for all classes of the parish."  
  
  [Note that phrase "All classes of the parish" - you could not use that now!] 
 



 
Southern  Reporter: 1894 
 
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 I love seeing on holiday in Austria and Bavaria, the wearing of the traditional costume,   not just in hotels and restaurants for the benefit of the tourist trade, but worn on Sundays, on high days and holidays and for weddings. The many shops that sell the dresses indicate this is not just a fancy dress, but an important part of the local culture.





 

 
 
 
 

 
 

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And after all that window shopping, take a break! 
 
In Austria we cannot resist going into a"Konditerei " - the equivalent of the French patisseries - not just to view the wonderful displays of cakes, pastries, fruit slices etc., but definitely  to taste a sample - or two! This is an important part of our holiday - any thoughts of diets go out of the window!  


A view of Cafe Zauner in Bad Ischl, near Salzburg. It was founded in 1832 and is in the traditional style of an Austrian Coffee shop. Unmissable for the food and the surroundings. 
 
    Shop in Bad Ischl, Austria advertising its handmade biscuits - Lebkuchen, 
 
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Sepia Saturday gives an opportunity for genealogy bloggers 
       to share their family history through photographs
 
 


 Click HERE to read how other bloggers are enjoying their shopping expeditions 
 
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8 comments:

  1. Wonderful fashions, advertisements, and of course the luscious sweets at the konditerei!

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  2. Store displays are a form of art. I hope we never get to a time when it's all online shopping.

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  3. I think the first two years of the pandemic made us all realize how much we take being able to "go shopping" for granted!

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  4. The U.S. is such a conglomerate of fashions and styles from so many different countries, we really don't have a national style as such except, perhaps, for the traditional "Pioneer" costume.

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  5. Hello? I'm not anonymous. I'm La Nightingail.

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  6. A splendid tour! Those are the kind of shops I enjoy discovering too. Fortunately there are still some places that maintain the old tradition of national fashions and styles. As to your mystery word, "cyclealities", this was the term the Lucas Co. used for its bicycle gear and accessories like saddle bags, lamps, and racks.

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  7. This was quite enjoyable and I learned a new word! The pastries are also making my mouth water. It all looks delicious.

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  8. I'm not anonymous either - Kathy at abbieandeveline.

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