Tag Archives: Drag

It will come in a Plain Brown Envelope… Late 1960s Trans clothing catalog – Fine Craft, Inc

I bought this a little over two years ago in a little antique store co-op in Novato, CA. The vintage clothing dealer had discerned that I might be a proper recipient of this delightful little packet after we got into a deep discussion about the construction of masculinity/effeminacy in men’s 20th Century dress when I was buying this unusually frank (if homophobic) comic postcard of the 1890s-1900s:

We discussed my obsession with men’s collars, and his with Mid-Century Men’s Magazines, and our mutual fascination with men’s shirts. I started pawing through part of his pile of men’s magazines, found an photo spread article about Trans life in one, and he brought out this packet with a little Transvestite dress catalog, a fetish corset catalog, and many leaflets in it. They are for custom made and ordered Trans & Drag clothing from the late 1960s, and since the company appears to have long disappeared, I want to share it with the world as a little snapshot of a time. A time when Trans life was just beginning to move out of the shadows and into the light, and starting the long and difficult task of enlightening the rest of us in the world by their efforts.

Costume Class Project: Designing in Cooperation

The “Lecture” (please read):

One of the first points that should be made about costuming is that it is part of a social organism. The organism may be part of a University theatre program, or part of a film production company, community theatre, Renaissance Faire producing group, television series producing studio, or professional repertory theatre, etc. However in all cases, costuming exists as a piece of a much bigger pie, in which costume is not the center, but a support to a larger whole. This is the key to understanding what we do. We exist as one of the heads of a multi-headed beast trying to create ‘ art.’ If we don’t talk or get along with the other heads, if we try to pull in the opposite direction from that which the rest of the beast is going, we trip over our own feet, and go nowhere at all.

Therefore, lesson number one: everyone must talk to each other, get to understand how one’s cohorts think, trade ideas, make suggestions, and then, when all the heads find a consensus on which way to go, go, go, go…..GO with commitment in the direction chosen, even if it means going over a cliff in one’s individual opinion.

This is very hard to do.

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