In Latin, black is designated by two terms: niger, a shiny black, and ater, a matte black – that of a frescothe merino wool yarn is twisted multiple times on itself and or a flannel(English flannel, from Welsh gwlanen, wool) - fabric whipped, which is not the same as the shiny black of a woolcontinuous growth fiber of animal origin (alpaca, camel, Kas twillfabric with diagonal ribs and grooves of varying widths - on. Sometimes the colour of mourning, sometimes the visible manifestation of a Puritan spirit, black appears to us in its ambivalence and its history. Thus, if black is synonymous with misfortune, it can also refer to values such as humility, temperance and dignity. Benedictine monks, magistrates and lawyers wear black robes.
Color of the Florentine nobility
It was technically very difficult to dye a garment black: until the end of the 18th century, all those who were supposed to be dressed in black actually wore dark shades of grey, blue or brown. Black clothes also quickly faded to greyish or purplish tones. Dressing in black meant having the material means to constantly renew one’s wardrobe, while renouncing colour. Deep blacks were therefore a luxury reserved for the upper classes of society.
Black or the illustration of bourgeois erasure
It was under the First Empire that black began to be imposed on the bourgeoisie. Men’s fashion renounced both the extravagance of the Revolution and the splendour of the Ancien Régime and followed the English model, making the black suit the norm. Synonymous with sobriety and elegance, black clothing conceals and hides as much as it illuminates and reveals the wearer.
Color of protest and fringe groups
Getting further from the bourgeois flannel suit, black became the colour of protest and marginal groups: Mods, Rockers, Punks. Black metamorphoses, between mixing genres, diversions, ambiguities, echoing a new culture that no longer makes fashion a rigid and elitist social choice but a space of freedom in which the arbitrariness of the sign becomes a game.
“What makes colour the colour is not its nature, it is not the eye-brain pair, it is society. By this I mean that the problems of colour are first and foremost problems of society. – Michel Pastoureau
GAZZARA, Ben, act. FALK, Peter, act. CASSAVETES, John, dir. and act. Husbands. 1970. 154 min.
PICCOLI, Michel, act. HITCHCOCK, Alfred, réal. Topaz. 1969. 127 min.
BRONZINO, Angelo, art. Portrait of a Man Holding a Statuette. oil on canvasthe tailor's cloth, placed between the lining and the outer. 99 x 79 cm. [1550?].
SCHIELE, Egon, art. Portrait of Max Oppenheimer. watercolor and charcoal on paper. 45 x 31 cm. 1910.
FERRY, Bryan. London, United Kingdom. 1980.
DELON, Alain. Paris, France. 1972.
NEWTON, Helmut, phot. 1970.
GAINSBOURG, Serge. BIRKIN, Jane. Paris, France. 1971.
MC CARTNEY, Paul. Royal Garden Hotel, London, United Kingdom. 1968.
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- OUTER POCKETS« It wasn’t until the Industrial Revolution that sewn-on pockets, and pockets hidden within the liningfabric that is used inside a garment, became standard in clothing… »
- INNER POCKETS« They are designed to meet the needs and habits of the wearer, evolving over time to accommodate changing lifestyles. »