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What shirt?

What shirt?

A shirt is a cloth garment for the upper body. Originally underwear worn exclusively by men, has become in American English a catch-all term for almost all the clothes of the upper body than clothing Outdoors such as sweaters or coats, or undergarments such as bras. The term "superior" is sometimes used in apparel lady. In British English, a shirt is a garment more specifically with collar, sleeves with cuffs, a full vertical opening with buttons. This is called American English as "button up shirt or shirt.

T-Shirt History

Clothing keeps the world's oldest discovered by Flinders Petrie, is a linen shirt "very sophisticated" First of all the grave of a Tarkan Egyptian dynasty, ca. 3000B.C. "Shoulders and finely pleated sleeves were tight to give trimness while the user room to move. The small band formed during Weaving on the edge of the fabric has been placed by the designer to decorate the neck opening and side seams.

The shirt is a lingerie men in the twentieth century. Although the shirt garment the woman was closely related to humans, clothing is the man who became the modern shirt. In the Middle Media, was a plain, undyed clothing worn next to skin and clothing underwear regularly. In medieval works, the shirt is only visible (not covered) in humble characters, like the shepherds, prisoners, and penitents. In the seventeenth century, men's shirts have shown much the same import erotic lingerie visible today. In the eighteenth century, instead of underwear, men "relied on the long lines of shirts … to serve the function of the drawers. The eighteenth century dress historian Joseph Strutt believed that men who wear shirts to bed were indecent. Even as late as 1879, a shirt with nothing visible was considered inappropriate.

The shirt had a few ornaments on the neck or wrists. In the sixteenth century, men's shirts were often embroidered, and sometimes unnecessary or lace collar and cuffs, [8] and in the eighteenth century, long neck frills or ruffles, is fashion. colored shirts are starting to appear in the nineteenth century, as seen in the paintings of George Caleb Bingham. It were considered as casual wear, for workers of the lower classes only, until the twentieth century. For a man, "with a blue shirt was unthinkable in 1860, but had become the norm in 1920 and 1980, was the most banal event. "

European women and U.S. have begun to wear shirts in 1861, when blouse "Garibaldi", a red shirt worn by the freedom fighters under Giuseppe Garibaldi became fashionable.

Shirt Types

1) Camp shirt – one cut loose, straight, short-sleeved shirt or blouse with a placket front Simple and open the neck of a "camp."

2) the shirt – shirt with collar, full length opening at the front from neck to hem and sleeves with cuffs

Quayabera – an embroidered shirt with four pockets.

3) T-shirt – as "Tea", a shirt without a collar or buttons, is a stretchy, fine fabric, usually cotton, and usually manga short. Initially worn under other shirts, is now a common shirt for everyday wear in some countries.

Ringer T – t with a sheet of fabric sewn in the neck and sleeve cuffs

Halfshirt – a shirt up hemmed
A shirt or a shirt or jersey construction (British English) – Essentially a shirt with large armholes and a large neck hole, often used by employees or more athletes transport function. Sometimes called a wife beater "When used without a topcoat.
Tank Top – Women's T-shirt with spaghetti straps, or a similar garment worn alone (often with bra). Also known cami, shelf, spaghetti straps or the top of strips.

Golf Shirt 4) polo shirt or tennis – dress shirts, short sleeve sweater with a soft paw Short button on the neck and back longer than (tennis tail ").
Rugby shirt – a shirt with long sleeves traditionally strong heavy cotton or wool, but today, many times sweeter.
Henley shirt – a shirt collar.

5) Baseball Shirt – usually distinguished by a sleeve of three rooms, a team logo flat waistseam

6) sweater – long sleeve sports shirt of heavier material, with or without hood.

7) tunic – Primitive shirt, distinguished by the construction in two parts. Originally a men's clothing is generally seen in modern times are brought by women.

8) Shirtwaist – historically (circa. 1890-1920) custom T-shirt of a woman (called size as "custom") and cut shirt of a man in contemporary use, cut a woman's dress as a dress shirt for men size and extended length dress at the bottom

9) shirt – often oversized, ruined or cheap underwear made of light fabric shirt dream.

10) sleeveless shirt – a shirt without sleeves. Contains only neck bottom hem, body, and sometimes the back, by type
Halter Top – One shoulder, clothing for women. It is mechanically similar to a deck with a rope around his neck and lower back, keeping it in place.

Tops generally not considered Shirts:

1) pants or layers of the shirt – a shirt infants, which includes a new time involved between the legs and buttoned at the front of the shirt
2) sweaters – knitwear top heavy
3) coats jackets and clothing similar Outdoors
4) above the tube (in American English) or idiot box (British English) – a shoulder, sleeveless "tube" around the trunk does not reach higher than the armpits, staying in place by elasticity or by a single strap that is attached to the front of the tube

Parts shirts

There are many terms to describe and differentiate types of shirts (outer clothing and body in general) and construction. Small differences may be important for cultural or professional group. Recently (late 20th century) has become common to use high to carry messages or advertising. Many of these distinctions apply to other items from the top of the body, such as coats and sweaters.

1) The shoulders and arms

Sleeve

Shirts can

* Did not cover the shoulders or arms – a tube top (not reaching higher than the armpits, staying in place by elasticity)
* Are keys such as tension
* Cover the shoulders, but without sleeves
* It has short sleeves, ranging from the handlebar (not extend below the armpit) to half sleeves (to elbow)
* Has the sleeves three-quarters (up to a point between the elbow and wrist)

Handcuffs

long-sleeved shirts can also be distinguished by wrists

* No buttons – cuff leg closure
* Buttons (or similar closures as lace) – single or multiple. A single button or a pair aligned parallel with the cuff hem is considered a dumbbell. several buttons aligned perpendicular to the band at the hem, or parallel to the leg are the Canyon sleeve.
* Twins designed eyelets
OA French cuff, where the final half of the band is folded over itself and closed with buttons holding a dumbbell. This type of bracelet has four buttons and a short foot.
or more formally, a twin – is attached as a French cuff, with the exception is not bent, but cornered the edge of the sleeve.
* The asymmetrical design of the shoulders, around one or with sleeves of different lengths.

Hem T-shirt

* To out of the belly button area bare (much more common for women than for men). View halfshirt.
* Attached to belt
* Cover your crotch
* Cover one side of the legs (essentially this is a dress, but a piece of clothing is either perceived as a jacket (pants) or dress (in Western culture, mainly used by women)).
* Go to the word (like a shirt, pajamas)

Body

* Vertical opening in the front, although low, with buttons or zippers. When closed with buttons, this opening is often called the front leg.
* Opening the like, but in the back.
* Left and right not to be separated, placed in the head opening to the top:
or V-shaped permanent opening on the top front
or no opening at the front superior
No vertical opening at the top front with buttons or zippers
Men's shirts are often buttoned + on the right of women, while often buttoned on the left.

Neck

* With Polo
* V-neck but no collar
* With the collapse of the neck
* With open neck or fringe
* Clamp
Windsor collar or spread collar – a more elegant neck designed with a large distance between the points (extension) to accommodate the Windsor tie knot. The Business Standard neck.
tab collar – a collar with two flaps of tissue that anchor small together behind a tie to keep the spread collar.
Necklace – best suited for the bow tie, often only worn for very formal occasions.
knitted neck collar – or a version Cervical Windsor distinguished by a narrow strip to take better account of the four in hand knot, Pratt knot, and half Windsor knot. A string of moderate dress.
buttoned collar – A collar with buttons down the points or tips to a shirt. The most superficial of the necklaces worn with a tie.
Collar Band – essentially the bottom of a normal cervix, first used as the neck of origin to which a separate collarpiece been established. Rarely seen in today's fashion. Also casual.
turtle necklace – a necklace that covers most of the throat.
* Do not run

Another feature

Pockets * – what (if any), where and with regard to closure: not closable, just a beat or a button or zipper.
* With or without hood

Some combinations do not apply, of course, example, a top tube can not have a collar.

Types shirting

There are two main types of shirts fabric of natural fibers and knowledge, man-made fibers (Synthetic-based oil). Some natural fibers are 100% cotton, bamboo, soy, organic cotton is now widely used in shirts high quality.

PSF, Tencel, viscose, etc. They are easy care fabrics, sometimes low cost.

mixed with cotton polyester cotton (polycotton) and 100% are commonly used in shirts.

S & Clothing is a professional manufacturer of shirts high quality leisure

target = "_blank" title = "S & a manufacturer of the garment> Professionals high quality leisure shirts "

About the Author

www.sa-garment.com


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