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Encyclopedia > Frock

A skirt is a traditionally feminine tube- or cone-shaped garment which is worn from the waist and covers the legs. Unlike pants, a skirt is not divided. The hemline can be as high as the upper thigh or as low as the ground. At its simplest, a skirt can be a draped garment made out of a single piece of material, but most skirts are tailored, with gores, pleats, or panels, of light to mid-weight fabrics, such as denim, jersey, worsted, or poplin.


Some medieval upper-class women wore skirts over 3 metres in diameter at the bottom. At the other extreme, the miniskirts of the 1960s were minimal garments that might not even cover the groin and buttocks fully.


A dress or frock is a garment consisting of a skirt with a bodice attached.


Skirts and dresses of thin or clingy fabrics are worn with slips to make the material of the skirt drape better.

 depicts the Countesse d'Haussonville, wearing a dress.
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Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres depicts the Countesse d'Haussonville, wearing a dress.

In Europe and America skirts and dresses can be worn by females of all ages when they are not wearing pants. A skirt may be worn as part of a suit. Skirts or dresses are the garments of choice for many women in formal situations, such as weddings and geopolitical summits. In cold climates, girls and women may wear trousers for warmth, with dresses on top to mark their femininity. In traditional societies, such as in many countries in Africa, Latin America and the Middle East, it is considered inappropriate for girls and women to wear trousers rather than a skirt or dress.


A disadvantage of skirts and dresses that contributes to many girls and women preferring pants is that they may be either too tight and therefore limit freedom of movement such as when climbing ladders, or too wide, in which case one, because of modesty, may feel the need to take the trouble to avoid exposing underwear or "too much leg" during daily activities or when there is a strong wind.


Skirts and dresses however can be cooler and less confining than many pants styles, and they are more practical for relieving oneself in remote outdoor areas. Dresses are still very popular for special occasions such as Proms or weddings.


The taboo against the wearing of skirts and dresses by men in the Western world is one of the strongest clothing gender roles and is virtually never violated. In some places men may wear what are de facto skirts or dresses, though they are not usually so defined. Examples of this include the kilt in Scotland (now usually worn only in ceremonial of formal occasions), and skirts for men as part of 1990s fashion design and of some counter-cultures or youth style fashions (e.g. gay culture, techno music). Also the sarong is worn commonly by men and women in some parts of the tropics.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Frock - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (347 words)
From the sixteenth century to the early twentieth century, frock was applied to a woman's dress or gown, in the fashion of the day, often indicating an unfitted, comfortable garment for wear in the house, or (later) a light overdress worn with a slip or underdress.
From the seventeenth century on, a frock is a thigh- or full-length loose outer garment worn by shepherds, workmen, and farm workers in the Britain, generally of heavy linen with a broad flat collar, now usually called a smock-frock.
A frock coat is a men's coat style of the nineteenth century, characterized by full skirts reaching to the lower thigh or knee.
Frock coat - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (356 words)
Frock coats emerged in the later eighteenth century as country clothing, from the traditional working-class coat called a frock, and became fashionable for dress and streetwear in the first half of the nineteenth century.
The term derives from frock, an ancient word for a loose outer garment, which is also the source of modern frock for a priest's robe or a woman's dress.
The cut of a frock coat with a waist seam flatters a man's figure, as opposed to a sack coat, and such frock coats remain part of some twentieth century military uniforms.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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