Thursday 26 May 2011

A Brief History of Nursing Uniforms


Some time ago, I found a blue striped nursing uniform from 1921 belonging to a Miss Maude Schurr of Philadelphia.  When my hubby noticed the stripes he made a racy comment about candystripers (one I can't mention here!).  I shushed him of course but it turned out he was on the right. track  The gradual change to sterile white by the 1940s saw the stripes passed on to the hospital aids.  The first actual nurse uniform was introduced circa 1860 and was indeed a far cry from the scrubs of today.

Florence Nightingale

Before the 19th century nursing was not a respected profession and most nurses were unmarried women who volunteered in the poorest communities for cities and health facilities.  Florence Nightingale (1820-1910) changed everything.  "The Lady with the Lamp" first gained fame during the Crimean War for tending to wounded soldiers at night.  Gifted in math, she was also a statistician who used pie charts and created the polar area diagram (still used today - see photo) to illustrate seasonal mortality rates at a military field hospital she managed.  (Parliament would otherwise never have understood traditional statistics to grasp the severerity of the war.)  In 1860, she pioneered modern nursing and opened it's first school, St. Thomas's Hospital in London.  She tirelessly advocated for sanitation and hospital hygiene and her efforts greatly reduced death rates especially in the military.
                                          
Of all her books, "Notes on Nursing" is the most renowned but she also wrote the never fully published "Suggestions for Thought to Searchers After Religious Truth".  One of the sections in the three-volume book is called Cassandra and protests women's inability to lead more productive lives.  From all that I have read about this dynamic woman, I'm not sure she believed that women were held back by men but rather that they held themselves back preferring a comfortable life with minimal social awareness.  She was in fact born into a wealthy family and in 1844 her mother, who wanted her to marry, protested her career choice.  It was quite a courageous act for a young Victorian woman who could have opted for a life of ease.  Ironically, due to her efforts nursing eventually became one of the few decent professions a woman could enter into and was encouraged by mothers everywhere.  After all, not only was it good training for marriage, it provided ample opportunities to meet potential husbands!  This idea certainly didn't fizz into the 20th century as you can see from the 1930s recruiting ad pictured above.  

Some believe nursing uniforms were adapted from habits since prior to this time nuns primarily cared for the sick.  Though nurses wore similar dress, it was actually one of Florence Nightingale's students, Miss Van Renssealaer, who designed the first recognizable uniform which was mainly blue with a starched white apron and frilly cap.  The uniforms were considered "fever proof" as they covered the entire body except the face and hands.  Only the hats varied among hospitals and were often used to denote rank.  Cloth hats were largely replaced with paper disposables by the 1950s but by the end of the 1970s they were gone altogether.

The World Wars brought the greatest changes as functionality became a priority.  Due to high casualties, the starched aprons, long skirts and sleeves were eventually abandoned in favor of increased efficiency and mobility.  Mass production led to shorter and simpler styles with easy cleaning.  Busy hospitals during the 1950s demanded wash and wear and even halted the starching.  As early as the 1960s, scrubs were brought over from Europe and though only worn in select US hospitals, these marked the beginning of the end for traditional nursing attire.  Also during this time, more men entered the profession and by the 1980s they were far more prominent in the field.  Today, scrubs are the norm being comfortable, stain and bacteria resistant as well as unisex.

1930s
1940s
WWII
1955
You know, it's been like this for a couple decades now and yet when I visualize a nurse I still think of that pristine white uniform and hat.  Personally, I liked the white because you knew who was who.  Now you have to look at name tags because the entire hospital staff is in scrubs.  Some images though we can never shake and regardless of scrubs, that reassuring white uniform will always spring to mind when we think of a nurse.
 

Tuesday 3 May 2011

Hollywood's Golden Age: Scarlett's Dresses


I'm simply fascinated with Hollywood's Golden Age.  I think most of us were introduced to fashion through the movies and no other medium can boast their impact on how we've dressed since the 1920s.  We all have our favorite movie we can watch over and over and the one that tops my list is 1939's Gone With The Wind. 

We owe the film's costuming to Walter Plunkett, the best period piece designer of his day.  While most designers opted to overlook accuracy, Plunkett meticulously researched his designs.  He learned of GWTW through Katherine Hepburn who was eager to play Scarlett O'Hara.  After reading the book, he had his agent contact producer David O. Selznick.  Plunkett already had established a name for himself having worked on films such as Little Women and The Gay Divorcee and was hired, but only on a non-exclusive basis to design costumes for the lesser roles and extras.  

Selznick continued to look at numerous design sketches and Margaret Mitchell, author of the book, heartily approved of a sketch of Scarlett drawn by Muriel King.  It was believed King would design all Scarlett's dresses but Plunkett was determined and on January 6, 1939, Selznick received the following cable, "PLUNKETT HAS COME TO LIFE AND TURNED IN MAGNIFICENT SCARLETT COSTUMES SO WE WON'T NEED ANYONE ELSE."  Ultimately, he created more than 5000 garments for over 50 major characters and thousands of extras.  The first film shot in color, he faced the challenges of presenting costumes in colors that worked on film and still met the demands of Selznick.  The Drapery Dress not only had to meet Technicolor's specs, it also had to match Leigh's eyes!  Scarlett's hats were created by NY milliner John Frederics who wisely chose publicity over payment.



So let's take a closer look at some of Scarlett's glorious creations starting with my favorite, the burgundy ball gown shown.  This is the dress Rhett forces her to wear and go unescorted to Ashley Wilkes' birthday party after she had been seen embracing Ashley at the mill earlier that day.  Rhett throws it at her shouting, "Wear that! Nothing modest or matronly will do for this occasion."  Just to give you an idea, 16 yards of French silk velvet was needed to recreate it.
                                             

 
I'm not sure who made the Drapery Dress more famous, Leigh or Carol Burnett with that hysterical spoof on her comedy show in 1976.  The velvet had to be faded to make it look more like the sun worn draperies at Tara.  The dress had a parting underskirt with a moss green velvet overskirt and a partial cape on the left shoulder.  And who can forget that drapery cord belt?  Worn in three scenes, it's most memorable when Scarlett needs $300 to pay the taxes on Tara and decides to ask Rhett for the money.  Having nothing to wear, she rips down the curtains and demands Mammy make her a dress declaring, "I'm going to Atlanta for that three hundred dollars and I've got to go looking like a queen."  It's replica required 16 yards of Italian cotton velveteen.

                           
The green sprigged muslin picnic dress in the porch scene was beautiful as was Scarlett's wedding dress which was recreated with 31 yards of French silk satin, 160 silk leaves and 20 lace leaves.  Plunkett actually fitted the dress on actress Barbara O'Neil's dress form (Scarlett's mother).  Since Scarlett rushed into her marriage to Charles Hamilton, she would have worn her mother's wedding dress so he lengthened the dress and added leg o' mutton sleeves, fashionable in 1834 when her mother was married.


Scarlett's dressing gowns were equally stunning like her blue velvet wrap trimmed with fox fur and the green velvet and gold dressing gown worn in one the funniest scenes of the film.  After the birth of her daughter, her stays are being laced up by Mammy who measures her and says, "Twenty inches."  Aghast, Scarlett replies, "I've grown as big as Aunt Pitty! You've simply got to make it eighteen and a half again!"

 
The costumes were placed in the David O. Selznick Archive and eventually five of Scarlett's dresses were given to the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center at the University of Texas.  Thankfully, before his death in 1982, Plunkett himself restored the original dresses but even so they remained in fragile condition as they were really only made to last the length of production.  Reproduced in 1987, these dresses are on display at the center but the originals are in too delicate a state and the Center is currently raising funds to restore them for display in 2014, GWTW's 75th anniversary.  (Please see the link below for more information.)

Gone With The Wind received 10 Academy Awards and at the time was the longest American sound film made at almost 4 hours including intermission.  Plunkett was just getting started and during his career, from 1927-66, he would work on more than 150 films including classics like the The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Singin' in the Rain, Father of the Bride, Showboat, Kiss Me Kate and Seven Brides for Seven Brothers.  In 1951, Plunkett shared an Oscar with Orry-Kelly and Irene for An American in Paris.

In closing, I'd like to thank Scarlett and Rhett for lessons on procrastination.  Quotes I use almost daily are "I just can't think about this right now, I'll think about it tomorrow.", "After all, tomorrow is another day." and of course, my personal favorite, "Frankly my dear, I don't give a damn."


*Many thanks to The Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center for providing this content and for preserving these treasures.  For more information or to make a donation please visit: