Christa Weil, author of SECONDHAND CHIC and IT'S VINTAGE, DARLING! tells how to find, restore, and style the very best of classic past fashion--from haute couture to thrift store coups--in an utterly up-to-date way
Friday, October 30, 2009
What's That About? Snoods
Fashion's tastemakers, with blithe certitude,
Declared '09 to be the year of the Snood,
So you won't be caught napping
About this snuggly head wrapping
They mean a scarf you can wear like a hood.
Something about the word "snood" brings out the Dr. Suess in me. It's such a fun word to say. Go on. Snoooooooood.
Anyway, the tastemakers are inaccurate in calling a hoody scarf--or any sort of neckwrap--a snood, because this it ain't. The covering made trendy by Missoni (top) and others right on down to Gap is, properly speaking, a cowl.
Meanwhile, a snood, properly speaking, is some sort of ribbonlike or crocheted or cloth catchment for the hair, worn at the back of the head. Wiki tells us that the word comes from the Old English. In olde tymes in the northern regions of the British Isles, snoods were worn in ribbon form by women to indicate that they were unmarried.
Throughout their span of popularity, traditional snoods kept long hair tidily contained--either for social propriety or for professional safety. Here, a how-to posted by 16 Sparrows at the ever-informative Fedora Lounge. You have got to read this, it's hilarious.
Crocheting snoods became a popular pasttime in WWII, and patterns are easily found on eBay. I think they look especially great under hats, as a more formal alternative to a ponytail. And if anyone can tell me from which film this wonderful shot of Bette Davis originates, I'll write a bad poem in your honor.
(photo top of Missoni '09 show by AP, in the daily Telegraph; photo Bette Davis posted by Mean Jean on J-Walk Blog, thank you!)
Well, whatever one wants to call them, I prefer the vintage ones. The modern is more like a scarf, which is still attractive!
ReplyDeleteMy old mum, now coming up to her 90th birthday, tells me that they were issued with snoods at Woolwich Arsenal, London in WWII where she was a munitions worker. She gets annoyed with articles about them wearing scarves (maybe that was in the USA?) The snoods were to protect their heads (she had beautiful long auburn ringlets)and remembers a colleague who was scalped by a machine because her hair got caught and she wasn't wearing one. A lifelong fashionista, she was otherwise not interested in wearing a snood! And is that Bette Davis in Now Voyager? One of my favourite films for the ending: "Don't ask for the moon...
ReplyDeletehow times have changed.
ReplyDeleteCarson