Sunday, October 18, 2015

Finding Your Vintage Look - How to Wear Vintage

Do you love vintage but think "I could never look like that?" Or do you go to vintage stores, try on a bunch of things and then wonder why nothing look right? Like today, women in the past came in all shapes and sizes. Most were very different from the fashion ideal of their time but they knew what styles flattered their shape, tailored garments to fit them, and always used the proper undergarments. With a few simple tips, you will be on your way to looking like a vintage fashion plate and save yourself a lot of frustration when vintage shopping.

Know Your Shape

First and foremost, know your shape. Be honest with yourself. Do you have hips? Do you have a chest? Does baby have back? Do you have more of a "boyish" figure? This is not a judgement on your body but just a definition of your shape. Each decade of fashion emphasized a different "ideal" shape for women. Depending on your shape, certain decades or styles of fashion will naturally look better on you. 

Hourglass figures look great in the styles 40s and 50s. People whose have a smaller chest and hips look great in the mod fashions of the 60s as those dresses are often cut straight. Almost anyone looks great in an A-line. I love the mod look of the 60s. I am shaped like an eggplant and those dresses make me look like a brightly colored sack of potatoes. In a 40s dress I can give Marilyn Monroe a run for her money because it flatters my shape. The people who look great in the mod styles usually don't look as great in the 40s styles because they don't have the bust and hips to pull it off. 

Know Your Measurements

Along with knowing your shape, it is imperative that you know at least your bust and waist measurements. Vintage dress sizes do not correlate to modern dress sizes so most vintage sellers will measure a piece flat and list the measurements as the size. Your bust size is NOT your bra band size. It is the diameter of your chest around the widest part of your bust. Your bra band size should be the measurement of your chest just under your bust. Your cup size can add 2 inches or more to that measurement. Your waist size is the size of your waist at the most narrow point without clothes on. Waistbands can add an inch or more. Other useful measurement are hips, inseam, arm length, and skirt length. Always get someone else to measure you and always get measured in your underwear or just a slip for the most accurate measurement. Here's a good guide for how to measure yourself. 

Now that you know your measurements, please be realistic when trying on clothes. Depending on fit, you can often fit into outfits that are an inch or two smaller than your actual measurements. Some outfits can be let out or you can move buttons to make them fit. Please don't think that you will magically find several inches of fabric to expand a dress that won't even come close to zipping closed. 

Wear the Proper Undergarments

The proper undergarments can mean the difference between looking fabulous and looking like a shapeless blob. Women wore corsets into the 30s and girdles or other types of body shapers into the 80s. The hippies might have burned their bras but the rest of the women were wearing them, as well as a slip and probably a girdle with their dresses. 

Today, you don't need to get a corset or even a girdle for your vintage look but for the love of all that is vintage, wear a slip. This will smooth out the lines of your dress and make it hang straight. It will also keep it from riding up and from sticking to your undergarments. Go to a good department store a invest in a good slip - not a body shaper stocking but a SLIP. 

Body shapers are also good to achieve a smooth shape but aren't as essential as a slip. They are great if you want to smooth out your hips, buttocks, and stomach areas. Some women swear by good old-fashioned girdles. If you want to try a girdle, go to a good lingerie store or bridal store and get fitted. A local, independently owned store is your best bet for these. Higher end department stores where the lingerie staff is trained to fit lingerie (not just take your chest measurements and point you to the bra racks) might work as well, especially if they have a large bridal section. Body shapers smooth out your shape. They won't reduce your size more than an inch or two nor make you fit into dress that you can't zip up in the first place. 

Bras of the 40s and 50s were the classic "bullet bra" shape. Those could add an inch to your bust size and many dresses were tailored to accomodate that shape. A padded bra might be necessary to fill out a dress from that era. There are companies that make repro lingerie for the vintage crowds as well. What Katie Did is one of them.

Tailor Your Outfits

This is a bit controversial as there are those who believe that you should never alter vintage garments. It is up to you. Women in the past would tailor their garments to get the perfect fit. A hem, a couple of bust darts, or taking in a dress in the waist can make the difference between looking dowdy and looking sharp. It is also almost essential if you have a larger chest or hips and end up with one part of your dress being larger because you had to accomodate another part of your body. I have hips and often have to get a larger dress to fit them. This makes the top a bit big and I have to take it in. I'm also short and I almost always have to hem everything. I never cut the fabric when I tailor it so if I sell it, someone else can take out the hem or the darts if they need to. A good seamstress can make an off-the-rack outfit look like it was custom made for you. Invest in a few alterations, wear the right undergarments, and you too can look like you stepped out of a vintage fashion plate. 

Friday, October 2, 2015

Plus-size Vintage and an American Princess

We recently received pieces from the estate of Margaret Preston Draper, the wealthiest socialite in Washington, DC in the 1910s-1930s. She was an only child and the richest heiress in New England. At one point, she wore the most expensive pearl necklace in the world, valued at $500,000. (Sadly, we do not have that.) She had a short, sad marriage to an Italian prince, which was never consummated and later annulled. You can read more about her here.

As expected from a socialite of her wealth, her clothes are amazing. Silks, beading, designer labels, the works. Many pieces show signs of where she dribbled food down her front. She didn't bother to have her clothes cleaned but just tossed them aside. *sigh*




The other characteristic about her clothing is that it is all LARGE. Many of the pieces would qualify as plus-size by today's standards. One of the cries we hear in the store is that "vintage is always so tiny!" or "people were so much smaller back then." While people were less heavy on average due to less junk food and more walking, there were people of all sizes throughout all periods in history. In addition, clothing that survives the times tends to be the items that get stuck in the back of people's closets and forgotten. This is why workwear is so valuable. It is used until it is rags so few pieces survive, especially from the earlier decades.

Think about what is stuck in the back of your closet - probably items from 20 pounds ago. Many items we get are from people's college days or pre-children days. I could easily fit into a majority of the items in the store when I started college. Then the freshman 15 hit. Then I got a desk job when I graduated. Then I turned 40. *sigh again*

There is still plenty of vintage out there in all sizes and we have a steady stream of it coming into our store from all eras and sizes. So ladies who have bust sizes over 38" and waists larger than a 32, don't despair. We have plenty of vintage for you! Come on in and take a look. If you are looking for something special, contact us ahead of time and we can pull items from our warehouse for you. 


Thursday, March 12, 2015

Mackelmore's Thrift Store vs. Vintage Store

I will admit that Mackelmore's Thrift Shop is a guilty pleasure of mine. It's back in high rotation on the local radio stations so I've been hearing it a lot as of late. If ever there was a song to advocate for vintage, it's Thrift Store.

Stay with me people. Seriously. As Sparky Sweets would say on Thug Notes, "Peep these here lyrics."

I wear your granddad's clothes
I look incredible
I'm in this big a** coat
From that thrift shop down the road


Now first off, you're not going to find your granddad's clothes at the thrift store. You're going to find granddad's clothes here at Amalgamated. Why is that? We have the largest selection of men's vintage in the mid-Atlantic. It's not all suits. We have workwear, shirts, denim, jackets, ties, you name it. 

We also buy your granddad's clothes so they don't end up at the thrift store or in the scrap heap. That way, you don't have to dig through racks and racks of slightly tattered trousers or shirts missing buttons. We only have the best and we pass them on to you.



Secondly, if you were wearing my granddad's clothes, you would be in coveralls like these here. He worked on the railroad all of his life (just like another song). You probably aren't going to find these at the thrift store.

Vintage Coveralls
Lastly, Mackelmore makes a great point that when you wear the latest fashion, you're just wearing what everyone else is wearing.

That shirt's hella dough
And having the same one as six other people in this club is a hella don't

When you wear vintage, chances are very slim that you won't run into someone with the exact same shirt or dress or suit, even if it was high fashion at the time. You can also mix and match fashions to create your own classic style.

Next time you are in the mood to pop some tags or want to wear your graddad's clothes, come over here instead. Our clothes are all cleaned and guaranteed not to smell like R Kelly's sheets. Yo!




Thursday, January 15, 2015

Dress Like Agent Carter - 1940s style

Yes we saw the new Downton Abbey. It was fabulous. More on that later. For now, let's talk AGENT CARTER! Agent Carter is the plucky love interest from the original Captain America movie. She holds her own in a room full of men, takes out a bunch of bad guys, and has fabulous red lipstick. Now she has her own TV show on ABC.

Agent Carter and Steve Rogers aka Captain America
The premise of the show is set just after WWII. The dedicated women who stepped up during the war to "free a man to fight" are getting laid off to make way for returning GIs. Agent Carter finds herself marginalized to secretarial work at the Strategic Scientific Reserve (SSR), a secret organization fore-runner to modern-day S.H.I.E.L.D. seen in the Avengers movies and on their own TV series, Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. Not to fear, Agent Carter finds ways to save the world with the help of Howard Stark (Iron Man's dad) and his real-life butler Jarvis all while keeping the files at SSR HQ up to date.

If that's not a good enough reason to watch, Agent Carter is nothing but 1940s eye candy. Combine the 1940s fashion with an amazing lead character, a decent story line, and some poignant social commentary of the time and you have the works of a good show.

On that note, let's look at some of Agent Carter's fashions. In the first Captain America movie, she essentially wore variations of standard Womens Army Corps (WAC) uniforms.

agent carter wac uniform
Agent Carter in the WAC Ike jacket, shirt, tie, skirt, and brown pumps

In the show, she's out of the Army and working as a civilian, leading a double life as a simple working girl for the phone company and as a special agent clerk/typist/femme fatale. She gets a few more wardrobe choices. First off, THE SUITS! There's nothing like a good 1940s women's suit. We have loads of them in the shop. Check out the shoes she is wearing too. They have a nice secure strap with a chunky heel. Chic and SENSIBLE! If you going to run down bad guys, you can't worry about breaking a heel in the process.


Even her perky waitress friend, Angie, has sensible shoes. Such a cute diner uniform too. I'm taking bets on when she's going to dump a pot of coffee in an annoying customer's lap. You know it's only a matter of time and they'd totally deserve it.

Angie Agent Carter Waitress
Angie serves up advice and a mean coffee
You can't have a 1940s show without hats. I think this fedora steals the entire first episode. Seriously women, why don't you wear more hats? Princess Kate has cornered the market on fascinators. There needs to be a huge revival of killer hats and not just for royal-type events and horse races. 

Agent Carter fedora
Agent Carter - hatitude
There are other neat day looks like this sweet skirt and blouse combo on her friend and Agent Carter's classy day dress. You can catch the back the hairdo of the extra in the background as well. 1940s hairstyles aren't hard. All you need is some practice. bobby pins or hair combs, a good hair rat, and some hairspray. These days looks are also super comfy and practical. Wear them to the office. Wear them to get groceries. Most vintage day dresses have real, working, pockets as well. I can't even carry change for the vending machine in the pockets of my modern dress trousers. Give me a day dress any time.

More great 1940s day looks


Not to leave out the men of the show. They all sport sharp 1940s suits. All expertly fitted complete with pocket squares. Gentlemen, don't forget your pocket square. It draws the eye upwards and makes you look longer and leaner. Be bold with your tie too! Patterns are your friend. Don't use the old standard stripes or dots. Boring! We're actually a menswear specialist so guys, come on in! We have over 2000 vintage suits in our warehouse for you to choose from.

1940s suits - great ties and pocket squares


You don't have to be special agent to dress like one. We have loads of vintage looks at the store to get you started. From 1940s day dresses to men's suits, we have something for everyone.

BONUS! Check out this interview with the costume designer of Agent Carter.

Thursday, January 8, 2015

How to Avoid Moth Damage - DIY Blog Post

Many of you who have visited the store have seen Deb, the short blonde behind the counter. In the latest installment of DIY Del Ray, she gives expert advice on how to keep moths out of wool clothing and out of your house. Have a question about how to care for your vintage items or how to remove a stubborn stain? Come on in to the store and ask Deb. She is a textile historian and has worked with museum textile collections.



Yikes! Clothes moths.