• gregorum
    link
    fedilink
    English
    13
    edit-2
    9 months ago

    Sewing machines killed capes. Sewing jackets/coats requires a lot of very difficult stitch work. This made jackets extremely expensive, while making capes was simpler and more affordable. With the advent of the sewing machine, that stitch work became easier and cheaper to do, so capes went out of fashion and more jackets became affordable to everyone.

    • @Hawke
      link
      139 months ago

      Cars killed the cloak. Cloaks remained popular for a long time after the invention of the sewing machine in the early 1800s, but fell out of fashion with the popularization of the automobile in the early-mid 1900s.

        • @Hawke
          link
          49 months ago

          Sure. Cloaks are not fun to use in a car. Basically they’re just too much cloth in too little space. They get stuck in the door when you close it, tangled in the seatbelt when you exit, and they sit either under you in a big lump or wrapped around onto your lap in a big pile. And without a lot of effort to arrange them properly they go under the seatbelt and loosen the fit a lot which is fairly unsafe.

          • @Serinus
            link
            99 months ago

            Seat belts didn’t begin to become standard until 1958. And they were commonly unused until the 1990s.

            • @Hawke
              link
              19 months ago

              Great, they still get caught in the door and get in the way, even without seat belts.

              • JilanicoOPM
                link
                English
                19 months ago

                Why did cars kill the cloak and not carriages?

                • @Hawke
                  link
                  19 months ago

                  My guess: Carriages were less common, and many designs of horse-drawn vehicle were open or semi-open.

          • @Drivebyhaiku
            link
            39 months ago

            SCA member and regular cloak wearer can confirm- this is truth.

            • @Hawke
              link
              29 months ago

              Far fewer by percent and absolute numbers than drive cars today.

    • JilanicoOPM
      link
      English
      49 months ago

      Interesting!! Thanks for sharing 👍