Pouch Silk Dress Pouch.
(the Mozar. *
ḥ to
T rikáyra, a place for trinkets).
The garment was part of the costumes usually women and was a sort of canvas bag with a scalloped cracks, vertical and center. Married women or older were using simple or ordinary, and especially single holidays, luxury, colored, shaped by their edges, with sumptuous embroidered geometric designs appearing, daisy leaves, etc., And the initials of the name and name of the owner, single, intertwined; all worked with true beauty.
There were certain items that a woman should keep it, they were symbols of his domestic power and its feminine mystique, keys, needles, thimbles, scented grease boxes and a bag to carry a few coins. All this is carried under the skirt, hanging from a set of chains that fit the waist and was called chatelaine. To access it had an opening on one side of the skirt.
During the seventeenth century began to incorporate the first women's clothing pockets. It was a couple of bags attached to a tape who stood in the waist and to also be accessed through lateral openings in the skirt were called pocket and its use spread until the eighteenth century. In his pockets, they could be coins, handkerchiefs and sewing implements. The most elegant, the chatelaine added another string to bring the more pious monocle and there hung a miniature Bible. Meanwhile, men's suits also had their pockets, but the jackets, and mostly false.
"Lucy Locket lost her pocket
Kitty Fisher found it
had not a penny in
Only one tape appeared "