When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: fingerless horse riding gloves for men

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Cycling glove - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cycling_glove

    Fingerless cycling gloves, also known as track mitts. These have a lightly padded palm of leather (natural or synthetic), gel or other material. Historically track mitts were string-backed but now are almost always made of a man-made textile containing elastane .

  3. 1860s in Western fashion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1860s_in_Western_fashion

    Riding habits of 1867 feature short to hip-length jackets and trailing petticoats for riding sidesaddle. Fashions of May 1868. Paris designs for May 1868. Relatively understated but showing developing back detail. Margherita of Savoy-Genoa wears an outdoor walking costume consisting of a loose jacket and matching skirt. The skirt is drawn up ...

  4. Riding habit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riding_habit

    A hat, often in the most formal men's style of the day (since the Victorian era, a top hat with a veil has been worn) Low-heeled boots, gloves, and often a necktie or stock complete the ensemble. Typically, throughout the period the riding habit used details from male dress, whether large turned cuffs, gold trims or buttons.

  5. Get lifestyle news, with the latest style articles, fashion news, recipes, home features, videos and much more for your daily life from AOL.

  6. Glove - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glove

    A glove is a garment covering the hand, with separate sheaths or openings for each finger including the thumb. [1] Gloves protect and comfort hands against cold or heat, damage by friction, abrasion or chemicals, and disease; or in turn to provide a guard for what a bare hand should not touch.

  7. Duster (clothing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duster_(clothing)

    The two of them went to look for men's wear at the Western Costume shop in California, which was a very large warehouse on the Warner Brothers lot and were dispensing most costumes worn in Westerns filmed in the US. There, they happened upon some dustcoats for riding horse, which had already been shown in John Ford's The Man Who Shot Liberty ...