- not
being worn. A
bicorne of such a
style is also
known as a
chapeau-
bras or
chapeau-de-
bras. The
bicorne was
widely worn
until World War I as part of the...
-
chevaliers – wide-brimmed hat
trimmed with
ostrich plumes Chapeau-
bras, also
chapeau-de-
bras – 18th- to early-19th-century
folding bicorne hat carried...
- may
originally have been
inspired by a
historical hat
model called "
chapeau bras" ("arm hat"), made as
bicorne or
tricorne to be
carried folded under...
-
characterize "fops" who
dressed in high
fashion with tall,
powdered wigs with a
chapeau-
bras on top that
could only be
removed on the
point of a sword. The Macaroni...
- ****emblies
without being dressed in knee-breeches,
white cravat, and
chapeau-
bras. On one occasion, the Duke of
Wellington was
about to
ascend the staircase...
- that
style of
affected delicacy,
which fashion had made
almost natural,
chapeau bras between his
hands as if he
wished to
compress it, or
under his arm; knees...
- sword. A wig-bag was
found on the back of the neck. A crescent-shaped
chapeau-
bras,
known as an opera-hat,
developed in the 1760s–1770s from the three-cornered...
-
Femme souriante au
chapeau à
plumes Femme aux bas-bleus Les
Soupeurs Femme avec un
chien Lis
jaunes Lola Ruiz Pic****o
Femme aux
bras croisés Le quatorze...
-
Chapeau (French pronunciation: [ʃapo] ) is a
commune in the
Allier department in
central France.
Communes of the
Allier department "Répertoire national...
- 3200 BC. The
origin of the word "cap"
comes from the Old
French word "
chapeau"
which means "head covering". Over time, the word has
evolved and changed...