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In clothing, the train describes the long back of the skirt, overskirt, or clothing that goes behind the wearer. This is a common part of women court clothing, formal evening dress or wedding dress.
In the Roman Catholic Church, cappa magna (literally, "the great cloak"), a form of mantle, is a thick, ecclesiastical robe with a long train. Cardinals, bishops, and some other honorable prelates are entitled to wear cappa magna .
Video Train (clothing)
Type of train â ⬠<â â¬
Mode
- Train court - Worn for a formal court event, court train must fall with strict dress code that differs from trial to court. For example, a French court code made in 1804 by Jean-Baptiste Isabey sets a maximum width of four inches for the border of an embroidered carriage for non-Royal users.
- Double trains - Two trains connected to the same dress, or one train divided into two trains.
- Fishtail train - A popular train at various times from the 1870s, up from the middle to the right skirt.
Bridal dress
The train in modern wedding dress (20th and 21st centuries) has its own terminology:
- Cathedral Train - also known as the monarch train, it can measure up to eight feet (2.4 meters). Royal cathedral car is considered the longest and most formal car, measuring up to 10 feet (3.0 meters) or more.
- Slide - medium length train up to five feet (1.1 to 1.5 meters).
- The court rail - in the terminology of the bride, the court train is a narrow car that extends 1 meter behind.
- Car swipe â ⬠- short cars that do not need to reach the floor. It's so called because it might have swept the ground.
- Watteau train - the modern version of the back folds (called 'Watteau folds') is seen in dresses returned to the 18th century.
Maps Train (clothing)
Gallery
Reference
- Black, J. Anderson and Madge Garland: Mode History , Morrow, 1975. ISBNÃ, 0-688-02893-4
- Payne, Blanche: Ancient History of Ancient Egypt to the 20th Century , Harper & amp; Row, 1965. There is no ISBN for this edition; ASIN B0006BMNFS
External links
Source of the article : Wikipedia