Downton Abbey Glove Etiquette

"Why are the women in Downton Abbey wearing gloves when they are drinking????"  

That was a query I received via email the other day.  It was from a friend, former trainee and current etiquette instructor, Bernadette Petrotta of the Polite Society School of Etiquette. This was an etiquette faux pas I had noticed several times, but ignored, as they work so hard on all of the little details on that show to keep it historically accurate.  

Add to that the fact that some more, shall we say "creatively thinking" etiquette consultants, are advising that wearing gloves is just fine and dandy while drinking, and some women are terribly confused.
Alarm bells rang in my head when I saw Lady Edith sitting at the table with gloved hands and a glass of champagne beside her, but I shut them all down, in order to hear the scintillating dialogue.

My response? "The gloves on Downton? I'll let Miss Manners answer that one... She does it so well!"
GENTLE READER: The only place where it seems to be traditional for ladies to eat or drink with gloved hands is in costume dramas. In real life, it was always considered crude, not to mention yucky, but in every period film, television show, play and opera, it is evidently intended to add a touch of what passes for “class.” Miss Manners pities the laborers who were taxed with cleaning those gloves afterward.You are correct that gloves are worn during dancing, but they had to be removed before touching any refreshments. This was a good argument against drinking when dancing.

It would serve Miss Manners right if, after obeying her strict command to remove your gloves, you handed them to her. You might reasonably point out that ball dresses unaccountably lack pockets, and are cunningly constructed so that gloves placed on them when the wearer is seated slip off the lap, thus requiring the wearer’s unfortunate dinner partner to crawl under the table to fetch them.

If you cannot cram your gloves into your tiny evening bag, where we hope there is no makeup on the loose, you must hold them with your free hand when eating or drinking while you are standing. At dinner, she suggests surreptitiously sitting on them, but please don’t tell anyone she said so.You are correct that gloves are worn during dancing, but they had to be removed before touching any refreshments. This was a good argument against drinking when dancing.

It would serve Miss Manners right if, after obeying her strict command to remove your gloves, you handed them to her. You might reasonably point out that ball dresses unaccountably lack pockets, and are cunningly constructed so that gloves placed on them when the wearer is seated slip off the lap, thus requiring the wearer’s unfortunate dinner partner to crawl under the table to fetch them.

If you cannot cram your gloves into your tiny evening bag, where we hope there is no makeup on the loose, you must hold them with your free hand when eating or drinking while you are standing. At dinner, she suggests surreptitiously sitting on them, but please don’t tell anyone she said so.



More "Glove Etiquette" —

Don’t eat, drink, or smoke with gloves on.
Don’t play cards with gloves on.
Don’t apply makeup with gloves on.
Don’t wear jewelry over gloves, with the exception of bracelets.
Don’t make a habit of carrying your gloves.


More photos follow of gloved ones drinking in period films and attempts at period photos,  all in that attempt to add what "passes for class."
It's too, too much! Two faux pas for the price of one.  Both a cigarette and a drink in gloved hands.  Both etiquette no-nos.
Tea, sympathy and Lady Mary... This small cup makes me immediately think "demitasse," however it also makes me think, "Wow! That Lady Mary has large hands!"


More "gloved ones" from Downton Abbey.

I have no idea who this is, as someone sent it to me.  She looks like she'd be a blast to hang out for an afternoon with, as she has an infectious smile! But once again, here we have two faux pas all in one photo; Gloved hand with the tea cup and the affectation of the "pinky" finger pointing up.
Now this was also emailed to me. The caption from my friend reads, "I'm speechless."  I cropped this photo as it had a brand name and the photographer's name on it as well. It is truly lovely... The women look beautiful, the flowers, the foods... and must have been difficult for a professional photographer to light. I appreciate the effort that went in to this photo shoot, but it is terribly incorrect with the gloves on while drinking tea. Thankfully, they don't have their pinkies extended! 
Another beautiful woman, but this photo shouts, "Tacky!"
The "Ladies" of Downton Abbey, correctly wearing their gloves.  They are not smoking, drinking, playing cards, or eating.  They simply stand and look lovely.  Back then, it was the only choice of occupation for many moneyed women.

13 comments:

  1. Brilliant post! I love the photos too. It's too bad about the actual etiquette ;(

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  2. Great Post, I wish the people who do these period programs would remember that accuracy is important, not just with clothes, but in every little nuance.

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  3. Fantastic information! You always serve it up with wit and humor, too. Thank you :+)

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  4. Yes, it may look all very pretty but it is odd how they often let little details like that slide. I know they have historical and etiquette advisors on set but I do wonder whether they often just forego the advice in favour of aesthetics. I read an interview with the Countess of Carnarvon of Highclere Castle once where she said the dining table was never set correctly when they were filming and that her family would never set it like that. She said she kept telling them how wrong it all was but they wouldn't listen.

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  5. Hello Rachel- That's why I really was sorry to have to write this post to begin with, as they do get so much correct (see my 2011 post The British Press vs Downton Abbey and Two Etiquette Sleuths; Historians or Hysterians? http://theetiquettesleuth.blogspot.com/2011/12/british-press-vs-downton-abbey-and-two.html)! There was an awful lot of bashing by the press early on in the show that was unwarranted.
    I do have an upcoming post though, on the place settings from the article you referred to, along with information from the glove maker who provides the gloves for Downton Abbey. She wrote me a lovely letter a week or so back. I have just been a bit busy on another blog, to get this new Downton Abbey post on here ;) - Maura

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  6. Let us commence a journey into the much travelled topic of buy gloves for women UK. Many an afternoon has been enjoyed by a family, bonding over the discussion of buy gloves for women UK. Though buy gloves for women UK is a favourite topic of discussion amongst monarchs, presidents and dictators, it is important to remember that ‘what goes up must come down.’ It is estimated that that buy gloves for women UK is thought about eight times every day by the upper echelons of progressive service sector organisations, who just don't like that sort of thing

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  7. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  8. I easily located at least 20 pictures of Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mum, Queen Mary, and women in Mary Casell paintings, wearing gloves while drinking tea and wine--indoors and out, state occasions and at public teas.

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    1. Well, I guess they're all "tacky"! If only Rachel had been there to set Their Royal Majesties right.

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  9. FYI - there seems to be at least one lady who plays piano very well while retaining her gloves https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Hi0b0DKCGw

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  10. I found this when trying to find out about gloves at dinner because if one is to eat one's asparagus with one's hands... and one could not eat tea sandwichs with gloves on - besides the gloves would be dirty from all of the things that one touched getting to tea. And I suspect that the Queen wouldn't take her gloves off if she was just making a toast?
    Thank you for all of the information.

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  11. this from wikipedia - Mousquetaire gloves have buttons at the wrist so the wearer could open the buttons and slip her hand out without taking the whole glove off. The finger section would be folded in and kept away tidily. This is how ladies wore gloves while dining. After the meal they would put their hands back into the gloves, usually for the rest of the evening. During the 19th century, especially from the mid-Victorian era onwards, gloves were tailored so as to fit very tightly onto the hands and arms—so tightly, in fact, that it was often necessary to use aids such as talcum powder and buttonhooks to put on one's gloves; therefore, it was considered somewhat uncouth to put on or remove one's gloves completely in public and women would make sure to don their gloves in the privacy of their homes before going out to some event (another reason for the popularity of the mousquetaire opening). The mousquetaire opening/fastening for women's long gloves seems to have become most popular during the Victorian era;

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  12. Thank you, Dale. I have quite a few more articles on glove etiquette on the Etiquipedia.blogspot.com that you may want to read, including articles on the mousquetaire gloves. In my newest book, “ What Have We Here?: The Etiquette and Essentials of Lives Once Lived, from the Georgian Era through the Gilded Age and Beyond...” I provide the alternative Emily Post once suggested to that tacky looking trend that took hold, with women unbuttoning the gloves at the wrist and shoving back the gloves’ fingers, as if they couldn’t be bothered to remove the gloves as other women at the table had. (This custom was wonderfully portrayed by the often rude and mannerless Countess Olenska in the 1990’s film version of Edith Wharton’s “Age of Innocence”). I will at some point post it on one of the blogs, but as it has just come out in the new book, I will hold off posting it for a while. – Maura J. Graber

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