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General => The Common Room => The Lighter Side => Topic started by: Forfarian on Tuesday 21 January 14 10:58 GMT (UK)

Title: How the other half lives
Post by: Forfarian on Tuesday 21 January 14 10:58 GMT (UK)
I was looking through the Penny Illustrated Paper of 20 January 1912 and came across a column headed 'Answers to Correspondents'. This was one of them.

Jessie - You can fasten your own blouse with the "Greta" fastener. There are no hooks and eyes or buttons, simply neat linen-covered rust-proof steels, which need not be removed for washing. It was really aggravating to be prevented from wearing your best blouse because you had no-one to fasten it.

My mind boggles at the depths of deprivation suffered by poor Jessie  :o
Title: Re: How the other half lives
Post by: LottieD on Saturday 25 January 14 02:08 GMT (UK)
Och, there's nothing worse  ;)
Title: Re: How the other half lives
Post by: Jennaya on Saturday 25 January 14 02:46 GMT (UK)
it's a hard life!!  lol
Title: Re: How the other half lives
Post by: Greensleeves on Saturday 25 January 14 10:35 GMT (UK)
I blame Jessie's lack of managerial skills  for this calamitous situation.  Had she bothered to consult her Mrs Beeton's Household Management it clearly states, regarding the duties of the Lady's Maid:

"It is perhaps unnecessary to add that it is their duty to be in waiting .... and to have all things prepared for the second dressing."

It also states that if the lady's maid notices  a muslin blouse is 'tumbled' she will have to take an iron to it.  I wonder what the mistress would have been doing to get her blouse 'tumbled'.   ;D
Title: Re: How the other half lives
Post by: Treetotal on Saturday 25 January 14 13:36 GMT (UK)
Well she certainly wasn't ironing the newspapers was she  ;D ;D ;D

I have just read "The Rise and Fall of the Victorian Servant" by Pamela Horn....Very enlightening and a really interesting read.

Carol
Title: Re: How the other half lives
Post by: Galium on Saturday 25 January 14 13:39 GMT (UK)
To be fair to Jessie, Edwardian blouses often fastened up the back, and if you didn't share your home with any female relations who could assist, it might be a bit tricky.

Eg. this one has hook and eye fasteners:

http://www.1860-1960.com/xa6498p0.html

It would be a shame to own that and not be able to wear it  :)
Title: Re: How the other half lives
Post by: mazi on Saturday 25 January 14 14:03 GMT (UK)
And then you get old and decrepit and the combined efforts of both of you cannot fasten things, that is if there is any time left after you have spent half an hour looking for the back of an earring.
 :D :D :D :D :D :D
mike
Title: Re: How the other half lives
Post by: ThrelfallYorky on Sunday 26 January 14 17:27 GMT (UK)
Thank heaven for zips, velcro, elastic and stretch fabrics! Not sure I'd want a Ladies' Maid attending me - too demoralising if she was all slim and pretty.
Title: Re: How the other half lives
Post by: Minimoo on Monday 27 January 14 14:01 GMT (UK)
I love that blouse but I wouldn't like to have to iron it !
Title: Re: How the other half lives
Post by: a chesters on Tuesday 28 January 14 06:11 GMT (UK)
And here was I about to offer some help  ;D ;D ;D

Then realised the date quoted :o :o :o
Title: Re: How the other half lives
Post by: 7igerby7he7ail on Tuesday 28 January 14 13:48 GMT (UK)
My gran [ a scullery maid, then a kitchen maid age 14-20 when she married] told me many years ago that she had to turn and face the wall, when any of the family she worked for happened to be passing. If she was alive today I think she would have something to say about 'Downton Abbey'.
Title: Re: How the other half lives
Post by: jbml on Tuesday 28 January 14 20:09 GMT (UK)
My mother apparently once looked up from scrubbing the kitchen floor, sighed, and said "I wish I'd lived in the days when people had servants to do this for them".

To which my ever-practical grandmother replied: "No you don't dear: you'd have been the servant!"
Title: Re: How the other half lives
Post by: mrs.tenacious on Tuesday 28 January 14 21:50 GMT (UK)
My mother apparently once looked up from scrubbing the kitchen floor, sighed, and said "I wish I'd lived in the days when people had servants to do this for them".

To which my ever-practical grandmother replied: "No you don't dear: you'd have been the servant!"

 ;D ;D ;D  Love it!


It's still happening today, albeit in smaller corners.  My OH works for a foreign royal family in this country, and it's a real eye-opener.  They never do anything for themselves; they've never had to. Money is literally no object. Everything they want is provided for with a metaphorical click of the fingers, and mostly upon a whim.