Nightshirt

A nightshirt is a garment intended for wear while sleeping, often with a nightcap. It is longer than most regular shirts, reaching down below the knees,[1] leaving some of the legs uncovered. It is often referred to as a nightgown for men.

A modern men's nightshirt

In the US, it also sometimes means a shirt, slightly longer than a regular shirt, reaching down to the thighs, worn as loungewear and nightwear. Traditional nightshirts are used just for nightwear, removed and stored away for next use upon waking. This other, non-traditional type is worn with pajama bottoms.

Until the 16th century men slept naked or in a day-shirt. Nobles in the 16th century then wore embroidered shirts or "wrought night-shirts". By the 19th century the night-shirt resembled a day-shirt with a loose, turned-down collar and similar length as a nightgown. In those days, nightshirts were often made of ruined or very cheap fabric, however, most nightshirts are now made with normal cloth to fit the sleeping purpose.[2]

See also

References

  1. "New snap to night shirts". Life. Vol. 39 no. 24. December 12, 1955. p. 105. ISSN 0024-3019. Retrieved February 9, 2011.
  2. Cumming, Valerie (2010). The Dictionary of Fashion History. Berg. pp. 141, 142. ISBN 978-1847885340.
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