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DS1987-66
Shift
DS1987-66

Shift

Date1780-1810
Mediumlinen (fabric, thread)
DimensionsLength: 48"; Width: 44"; Hem fullness: 80" approx.
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number1986-207
DescriptionWoman's white linen tabby shift or undergarment. Wide low neck faced with 3/8" tape, with two eyelets for drawstring at center front of the neckline. Ungathered sleeves with plain hemmed edges and gussets under arms. Two reinforcing bands at top of each shoulder and at joining of sleeve to body. Long full body, cut on angle from shoulder to hem, with triangular pieces to create extra skirt fullness. Sewn with linen.
Label TextShift
England or America, 1780-1810
Linen
1986-207
The shift of the eighteenth century was both underwear and nightgown. A shift made of white linen or cotton was the bottom layer of a woman's ensemble, acting as a washable liner to protect the outer clothing from perspiration and soil. Equally important, the shift protected the woman's skin from abrasion by the boned stays, hoops, woolen petticoats, and other discomforts of fashionable clothing. Because they were considered underwear, shifts were not worn out in the open except by slave women working in rural areas and free women far removed from public settings. Many women slept in the same shifts they wore during the day. Those with larger wardrobes had separate night shifts.
Shift 2015-251
1800-1825
2009 Record shot by L. Baumgarten. Shift.
1810-1820
DS1996-0938
1807-1815
KC1975-674
1830s
DS1983-1227, Shift.
1780-1810
1990-7, Shift
Ca. 1780
2009 Record shot by L. Baumgarten. Shift of shirt from tablecloth.
Ca. 1650 (Textile)
1996-336, Shift
late 18th - early 19th c.
C1975-845
1700-1750
2009 Record shot by L. Baumgarten. Shift.
1700-1750; altered 1790-1820
Shift 1940-172
1790-1820
DS1990-0083
1790-1820