This HTML5 document contains 23 embedded RDF statements represented using HTML+Microdata notation.

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Namespace Prefixes

PrefixIRI
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Statements

Subject Item
n3:c6d9be36-c02a-3618-bd02-fa3c84490b1f
rdf:type
ecrm:E22_Man-Made_Object
rdfs:label
1840 / 1846, United Kingdom
rdfs:comment
<b>Object Type</b><br>People have been wearing socks since at least the 8th century, but socks really became popular at the beginning of the 19th century, when men began wearing trousers instead of breeches. Men's socks were usually made of cotton, merino or silk. Finely spun silk socks such as these were expensive and often reserved for evening wear or special occasions.<br><br><b>Ownership & Use</b><br>Delicately embroidered silk socks complemented the low-cut shoes that were worn with evening dress. They were often worn with suspenders to help keep them pulled up.The 19th-century fashion for black extended to men's socks, but brighter colours were also worn, such as scarlet, bright blue, green and tartan - sometimes to match the tie or cravat. The writer Lytton Strachey wears olive green socks with a grey suit and a green tie in a portrait of 1904 by Simon Bussy.<br><br><b>Materials & Making</b><br>Technological innovations and improvements in machinery meant that socks could be manufactured in greater numbers as the century progressed. The firm of I. & R. Morley was one of the largest firms. It exhibited spun silk shirts, children's gloves and men's socks with spun silk at the 1851 Great Exhibition. By the 1870s new methods of producing spun silk socks meant that, although still a luxury item, they were affordable by the middle classes. Pair of socks of machine-knitted silk, made in Great Britain, 1840-1846 Pair of socks of machine-knitted silk. With alternate bands of stocking stitch and openwork stitch, embroidered with black silk and hand-finished. The plain bands are embroidered in small black florets and the centre front panel has Saint Andrew's crosses with diamond between the arms, and diagonal bands. Ankle length, unfashioned and hand-finished. British Galleries: Socks became fashionable during the first half of the 19th century when men started wearing trousers instead of breeches. They had previously worn stockings but socks were easier to keep in place beneath a trouser leg. By the 1840s they were made with ribbed cuffs so that they did not fall down. [27/03/2003]
owl:sameAs
n14:O78793
dc:identifier
T.225&A-1964
ecrm:P3_has_note
<b>Object Type</b><br>People have been wearing socks since at least the 8th century, but socks really became popular at the beginning of the 19th century, when men began wearing trousers instead of breeches. Men's socks were usually made of cotton, merino or silk. Finely spun silk socks such as these were expensive and often reserved for evening wear or special occasions.<br><br><b>Ownership & Use</b><br>Delicately embroidered silk socks complemented the low-cut shoes that were worn with evening dress. They were often worn with suspenders to help keep them pulled up.The 19th-century fashion for black extended to men's socks, but brighter colours were also worn, such as scarlet, bright blue, green and tartan - sometimes to match the tie or cravat. The writer Lytton Strachey wears olive green socks with a grey suit and a green tie in a portrait of 1904 by Simon Bussy.<br><br><b>Materials & Making</b><br>Technological innovations and improvements in machinery meant that socks could be manufactured in greater numbers as the century progressed. The firm of I. & R. Morley was one of the largest firms. It exhibited spun silk shirts, children's gloves and men's socks with spun silk at the 1851 Great Exhibition. By the 1870s new methods of producing spun silk socks meant that, although still a luxury item, they were affordable by the middle classes. Pair of socks of machine-knitted silk. With alternate bands of stocking stitch and openwork stitch, embroidered with black silk and hand-finished. The plain bands are embroidered in small black florets and the centre front panel has Saint Andrew's crosses with diamond between the arms, and diagonal bands. Ankle length, unfashioned and hand-finished. British Galleries: Socks became fashionable during the first half of the 19th century when men started wearing trousers instead of breeches. They had previously worn stockings but socks were easier to keep in place beneath a trouser leg. By the 1840s they were made with ribbed cuffs so that they did not fall down. [27/03/2003] Pair of socks of machine-knitted silk, made in Great Britain, 1840-1846
ecrm:P43_has_dimension
n12:1 n12:2
ecrm:P65_shows_visual_item
n5:745
ecrm:P138i_has_representation
n10:1ca1b03f-3c48-3d81-9d52-4700f2f61787
ecrm:P102_has_title
1840 / 1846, United Kingdom
Subject Item
n2:87f45210-43da-558f-8f34-13539727f63d
rdf:type
rdf:Statement
rdf:predicate
ecrm:P65_shows_visual_item
rdf:object
n5:745
rdf:subject
n3:c6d9be36-c02a-3618-bd02-fa3c84490b1f
prov:wasGeneratedBy
n8:87f45210-43da-558f-8f34-13539727f63d
silk:L18
0.8546