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Caraco - Wikipedia A caraco is a style of woman's jacket that was fashionable from the mid-18th to early 19th centuries Caracos were thigh-length and opened in front, with tight three-quarter or long sleeves
caraco | Fashion History Timeline The terminology for women’s jackets in this era is complicated In some cases, caraco is seen to refer to other kinds of jackets as a catch-all term, but generally it refers to fitted-back garments with shaped panels and the inverse box pleats at the waist
What Is the Difference Between a Caraco and a Casaquin? and . . . A caraco is a long-length jacket with a fitted back, like a robe a l’Anglaise The length of the skirt of these jackets seems to be about mid-thigh, and the skirts usually have inverted box pleats at the back, often pressed but sometimes left loose
Caraco | Italian | The Metropolitan Museum of Art Overview Exhibition History Title: Caraco Date: ca 1785 Culture: Italian Medium: silk Credit Line: Catharine Breyer Van Bomel Foundation Fund, 1981 Object Number: 1981 210 7
The Philosophy of Albert Caraco | Reason and Meaning Caraco (1919 – 1971) was a French-Uruguayan philosopher, writer, essayist and poet of Turkish Jewish descent He is known for his two major works, Post Mortem (1968) and posthumously published Breviary of Chaos (1982)
Historical Costume 1780s : Caraco. But what IS a caraco? Historical author Joanna Maitland looks at the Georgian 1770-80 caraco, what it was, how it was made, how it was worn, and how useful it could be With illustrations of original examples of the caraco