Wardrobes the Way they Were

Time immemorial…. Has a lovely sound to it, doesn’t it? Like days of yore.

In fact, in British law, time immemorial is defined as everything before the sixth of July 1189. This was decided in 1275, presumably because by that point no one could remember anything before the sixth of July 1189 and it was therefore literally time immemorial – a time that no one living could remember.

Hunterian Psalter c. 1170 feasting
Don’t worry, no one remembers you taking the last piece of pizza in 1170.
It is interesting to consider what time immemorial would be these days. It’s so easy to forget how short a time, relatively speaking, things have been The Way Things Are. Mass transport, antibiotics, Queen Elizabeth II, the Internet… Fast fashion has only been around for a few decades, and yet how strange it now seems to have just a few carefully tended items of clothing, worn for years and infrequently replaced.

In the first half of the twentieth century, you’d be likely to see a woman debating whether to wear, say “my blue” or “my black”. Each garment familiar to the last detail. These same women’s grandchildren are angsting over which of their 17 black tops is the right one for this evening – this one’s coming adrift at the seams, that one’s gone grey in the wash, that one I really like is in the laundry basket…

Being decidedly old-fashioned in this matter, I find myself out of tune with much of the world around me, despite behaving in a way that existed within living memory – and all the time before that, right back to Time Immemorial.

The core of my wardrobe is five dresses. They range in age from two to five years old, and with one exception, have been worn in almost constant rotation during that time. And that being the case, they’ve needed occasional mends and I’ve also, over the years, made some alterations.

Mend and Make Do- Dressmaking Classes in London, 1943 D12891
Unsurprisingly, the one I wear least has needed the least work. It’s not that I don’t like it, it’s just that being a thick cabled knit dress, it doesn’t get worn in warm weather – it’s just too hot. I’ve had it since March 2016, and the only attention it’s needed in that time is re-securing the edges of the pockets.

The oldest dress – acquired in May 2014 – is the second-least amended, possibly because it’s made of quite sturdy material – sturdy enough that I don’t wear it in high summer. I took the hem up when I got it (the standard figure Shukr designs for is taller for the width than I), and some years later mended a strained armhole seam.

The newest dress (just over two years old) has also not had a great deal done to it. I made a matching kerchief out of conveniently matching cloth as part of last year’s Upskilly & Stuff, I used the same material for a unobtrusive reinforcement at the base of the zip, and I mended a hole in the pocket with the sewing machine while wearing the dress. I don’t think I would have dared if the machine wasn’t a manual.


My favourite dress is the second-to-oldest (acquired August 2015), and not being of such thick material as the oldest, it has needed a bit more work. I’ve replaced the buttons, I’ve coloured in the bit where I got bleach on it (brown sharpies: they do exist), I’ve re-secured the waist seam where it was coming loose, and I’ve patched and darned holes where the armholes meet the side-seams.

I recently noticed that one of the patches needed mending, and having done that, I gave the dress a looking over… only to discover that one entire sleeve is coming adrift at the shoulder. I have mended it again – it is my favourite, after all – yet I fear it may not be with us for much longer. (When it is finally past mending I will snip off the buttons for re-use and compost the rest.)

But the award for Most Emended Dress goes to the one I wore to write this (which I’ve had a little over three years). I took up the hem – and what a saga that was – I made a matching kerchief in part from the trimmings, I put tiny weights in the hem and mended it when they came out, I mended a hole in the pocket and I dyed both the dress and its kerchief another colour.

Diamond Package Dyes (3092728311)
Hems taken up, holes mended, buttons replaced, colour changed, accessories made to match… these dresses have lived. Happily, most of them still have a good bit of life left in them. And that, my friends, is the way wardrobes were, since time immemorial, and the way they can be again.

What’s the winner of Most Emended Item in your wardrobe?

4 Replies to “Wardrobes the Way they Were”

  1. Once upon a time when maxi skirts were trendy, and bib-front skirts were also cool, I made myself a full-length, bibbed-front (the bib lined with other material) woollen skirt (yes, also when woollen material was within the spending reach of a poor tertiary student). It was great to wear to Varsity with a warm jersey under it, on a cold winter day. Within a couple of years I realised the waist size no longer matched mine. So I removed the bib, took off the waistband, took out the zip, cut a few inches off the top of the skirt, reinserted the zip, and used the old waistband to made a new one, much shorter than the old deep band. I wore the longish skirt to work at my job when I was about 20, but not so often. It has survived over the decades, partly because it seldom comes out of storage. But I still love my old brown wool skirt.

    1. Adept at adapting! I frankly wouldn’t want to insert a zip once, let alone twice, but Well Done You.
      Am I correct in thinking that bib-front skirts are like overalls/dungarees but with a skirt instead of trousers for the bottom part? Which begs the question: at what point does a skirt become a dress, or vice versa?

        1. I’d quite like an apron like that – I’m just afraid I’d get myself hopelessly tangled up in it and have to scream for help.

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