Dinner suit

Man's tail suit originally made by Playdell and Smith British
Made over for a woman by Mrs. Bertha Black Lewry American

Not on view

Counseling wartime women to convert their husband's unused evening clothes into their own evening suits, Harper's Bazaar (April 1943) created a model with a girdled waist and hipline. Shoulder pads exaggerated the torso and emulated masculinity at a time when women assumed many of the roles formerly exclusive to men. The man's tail suit was originally made by Playdell and Smith of London in 1929; Mrs. Bertha Black Lowery of Jackson Heights made over the suit on commission from Harper's Bazaar.

Dinner suit, Man's tail suit originally made by Playdell and Smith (British), wool, British

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