The "box pleat" skirt in your first image is actually a gored skirt. The "gore skirt" in the second image has no evidence of gores at all and simply looks like the circular or semi-circular skirt at rest. The "gored skirt" in the third image is actually just an A-line skirt. The "ruffled skirt" in the fourth image is a tiered skirt; ruffles are decorative elements, not functional (i.e. if you remove them, the skirt still works as a skirt), so while the panels are constructed in a similar way to ruffles, only the bottom tier could really be considered a ruffle.
Pretty useful, but can't find any modern types of skirts, these skirts seem quite outdated.
ReplyDeleteThank you
it is so nice to see your types of skirt...thank you:)
DeleteGreat blog!!!!!!
ReplyDeleteI don't see anything outdated about these skirts. Thanks for posting this!
ReplyDeleteThe "box pleat" skirt in your first image is actually a gored skirt. The "gore skirt" in the second image has no evidence of gores at all and simply looks like the circular or semi-circular skirt at rest. The "gored skirt" in the third image is actually just an A-line skirt. The "ruffled skirt" in the fourth image is a tiered skirt; ruffles are decorative elements, not functional (i.e. if you remove them, the skirt still works as a skirt), so while the panels are constructed in a similar way to ruffles, only the bottom tier could really be considered a ruffle.
ReplyDeletewhat does the long skirt 7455 call?
ReplyDelete