Sleeves
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Sleeves
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14 Questions

1.
Sleeve style created by joining the sleeve to the garment with an armhole seam that circles the arm near the shoulder

2.
Sleeve style that is cut in one piece along with the garment front and back.

3.
Sleeves with a slit down the center.

4.
A short sleeve gathered at the top and cuff and full in the middle.

5.
Sleeve very full at the top, then diminished to a tight cuff or wrist band; zenith in 1828-33 and revived in 1895. sleeve was so full that it required padding or whalebone to maintain that desired shape; also called gigot sleeve

6.
A kind of sleeve that starts at the shoulder and widens along the forearm, not reaching the wrist.

7.
Gathered into the armhole and full below the elbow with fabric puffed or pouched at the wrist

8.
A long sleeve that is fitted from the shoulder to wrist and gently flared from wrist onward. The bell sleeve is very similar to the poet sleeve, but has a 'cleaner look,' often without ruffles.

9.
The sleeve of a shirt.

10.
Flared at the bottom of the sleeve

11.
Sleeve style formed with a front and back diagonal seam that extends from the neckline to the underarm

12.
Very large puff sleeve extending to the elbow gathered into a regular armhole and frequently made of crisp fabrics popular in 1890s for evening and wedding dresses; Puff had to be stiffened and padded to keep shape. Also known as melon sleeve.

13.
To fold up the ends of one's shirt sleeves to make them shorter.

14.
A small, short sleeve which sits on the shoulder, either forming a stiff cap or falling on to the arm to provide minimal coverage.