A correction to the the "East Coast upper crust here in the US.":
Many horse owners ride and drive their horses in the USA. Some folks drive one
pony and others can afford to drive 4 horses pulling a large carriage, as
described in the original email. Some folks drive just for fun and other
"c
It is now 12.30 am (just after midnight) Friday "morning". There has been
nothing come in since about 9.30 AM Friday. that's 15+ hours and seems like a
long time.
I know it's just before SOME 4th-of-July-long-weekend events, but it seems
early for EVERYbody to have disappeared?
see you soon,
My take on reading the script mentioned seems like it is refering to an
"outing" perhaps like a "caravan" to a destination,organised by a Host. That
Host would be the "Whip," keeping all the guests from getting lost or seperated
,and on the right bus or touring car and any independent cars from
Emily Gilbert wrote:
>Those are astonishing!
>By the way, the fourth photo down is labeled "a dress based on a 1730
>design", but it looks to me more like a gentleman's banyan over a
>waistcoat. What do you all think?
Indeed it does. Also, can 18th century experts tell me why the saque-back dre
from context on this page http://vasportsman.com/Coaching_in_Newport.pdf, I
believe that in the modern sport of "Coaching", "whip" may refer to the main
driver, usually the owner or at least the organizer of a coaching group, the
one who weilds the literal whip.
Coaching, as is currently quite
Isnt the whip the driver of the coach? The others sound like his friends.
What a fun question!
--cin
On Wed, Jun 27, 2012 at 9:41 PM, wrote:
> I am working with a 1914 etiquette book and a person titled Whip is used in
> the section about Dress When Driving. What / Who is a Whip in this
> cont
(Apologies if you get this twice, the first one didn't appear to go through)
This from a bog body:
http://sciencenordic.com/dyed-clothes-came-fashion-early-iron-age
What I find most striking is the twilled plaid. I did a double take
because I thought for sure that nobody could be wearing *hounds
I believe the term "whip," as used here, refers to the driver who carries (and
uses) an actual whip. A "whip" carried the whip. Depending on the context of
the useage, there may be overtones of skill indicated. A man who was a poor
whip wasn't very good at driving his curricle, phaeton, or ot
In a Regency context, a great whip would be a gentleman who excelled at driving
horses attached to some kind of carriage. This would not be used for the man
who drove coaches for a living but only for someone of means who liked to race
and show off his skill.
Janet
My guess is that it means the person driving the coach or carriage. A
century earlier, during the Regency era, someone who was good at driving
a horse or horses was called "a notable whip."
Emily
On 6/27/2012 11:41 PM, penn...@costumegallery.com wrote:
I am working with a 1914 etiquette boo
The whip is the one driving the coach. The dress only apply if he is the host
and not a hired/employed coachman.
Teena
From: "penn...@costumegallery.com"
To: h-costume
Sent: Thursday, June 28, 2012 12:41 AM
Subject: [h-cost] What is a Whip?
I am working wit
As support to my statement that the whip is the driver of the coach. Here is a
website about an event in Newport which sounds lovely:
http://www.newportmansions.org/events/a-weekend-of-coaching
A quote from the text on that website: "All seating is outside, with the
driver, known as a "whip," s
Whip means the Driver of the cart or carriage.
The Driver carries a whip to communicate with the carriage horse (NOT to beat
it) because when driving you do not have legs to guide the horse. Used
correctly, the whip is used to reach the horse's side and touch him with the
whip, instead of a le
The whip would be the driver, or, in other words, the person whipping the
horse, or handling the whip. Simple transfer of tool name to occupation.
On Thu, Jun 28, 2012 at 12:41 AM, wrote:
> I am working with a 1914 etiquette book and a person titled Whip is used in
> the section about Dress When
At 09:12 PM 6/26/2012, you wrote:
This from a bog body:
http://sciencenordic.com/dyed-clothes-came-fashion-early-iron-age
What I find most striking is the twilled plaid. I did a double take
because I thought for sure that nobody could be wearing *houndstooth*
plaid so early.
The rest of the acc
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