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The displayed role for belts |
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Release time:2013-02-28 Source:admin Reads: | |
Belts also can be divided into clothing. In our daily life whether men or women, they both wear belts for decoration. This leads belt hangers are also popular to the belts sellers. If the belts need to sell well, not only the quality and price are important, but also need to show a good impression to buyers. So there are some people who source this chance to develop various kinds of belt hangers.
Generally most belt hangers are made by plastic. Belts have been documented for male clothing since the Bronze Age. Both genders used them off and on, depending on the current fashion. In the western world, belts were more common for men, with the exception of the early Middle Ages, late 17th century Mantua, and skirt/blouse combinations between 1900 and 1910. Art Nouveau belt buckles are now collector's items.
Nowadays, you can see various belts are sold with belt hangers, and for some people, which kind of belt you wear can stand your status. Until the First World War, the belt was a decorative as well as utilitarian part of the uniform, particularly among officers. In the armed forces of Prussia, Tsarist Russia, and other Eastern European nations, it was common for officers to wear extremely tight, wide belts around the waist, on the outside of the uniform, both to support a saber as well as for aesthetic reasons. These tightly cinched belts served to draw in the waist and give the wearer a trim physique, emphasizing wide shoulders and a pouting chest. Often the belt served only to emphasize waist made small by a corset worn under the uniform, a practice which was common especially during the Crimean Wars and was often noted by soldiers from the Western front. Political cartoonists of the day often portrayed the tight waist-cinching of soldiers to comedic effect, and some cartoons survive showing officers being corseted by their inferiors, a practice which surely was uncomfortable but deemed to be necessary and imposing. |