Pockets — Cambridge IELTS 18 Academic 2023 TEST 2 — IELTS Test

Cambridge IELTS 18 Academic 2023 TEST 2

Pockets

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(0:00) Part 4. You will hear a student on a fashion design course giving a talk about the history of pockets. (0:09) First, you have some time to look at questions 31 to 40. (1:03) Now listen carefully and answer questions 31 to 40.

(1:11) Good morning. Now, we've been asked to choose an aspect of European clothing or fashion (1:18) and to talk about its development over time. (1:21) I decided to focus on a rather small area of clothing, and that's pockets.

(1:27) I chose pockets for two reasons, really. (1:31) We all have them in jeans, jackets, coats, for example, (1:36) and even though we often carry bags or briefcases as well, (1:40) nothing is quite as convenient as being able to pop your phone or credit card into your pocket. (1:47) Yet, I suspect that other than that, people don't really think about pockets too much (1:53) and they're rather overlooked as a fashion item.

(1:57) It's certainly very interesting to go back in time (2:00) and see how pockets developed for men and women. (2:05) In the 18th century, fashions were quite different from the way they are now, and pockets were too. (2:12) If we think about male fashion first, that was the time when suits became popular.

(2:20) Trousers were knee-length only and referred to as breeches. (2:25) The waistcoats were short and the jackets were long. (2:30) But all three garments were lined with material (2:33) and pockets were sewn into this cloth by whichever tailor the customer used.

(2:39) The wearer could then carry small objects such as pencils or coins on their person (2:45) and reach them through a gap in the lining. (2:50) Coat pockets became increasingly decorative on the outside for men who wanted to look stylish. (2:56) But they were often larger but plainer if the wearer was someone with a profession (3:02) who needed to carry medical instruments, a doctor or physician, for example.

(3:13) The development of women's pockets was a little different. (3:18) For one thing, they weren't nearly as visible or as easy to reach as men's. (3:24) In the 18th and 19th centuries, women carried numerous possessions on their person (3:30) and some of these could be worth a lot of money.

(3:35) Women were more vulnerable to theft and wealthy women, in particular, (3:40) worried constantly about pickpockets. (3:43) So, what they did was to have a pair of pockets made that were tied together with string. (3:51) The pockets were made of fabric, which might be recycled cloth if the wearer had little money, (3:57) or something more expensive, such as linen, sometimes featuring very delicate embroidery.

(4:05) Women tied the pockets around their waist so that they hung beneath their clothes. (4:10) Remember, skirts were long then and there was plenty of room to hide a whole range (4:16) of small possessions between the layers of petticoats that were commonly worn. (4:21) They would have an opening in the folds of their skirts, (4:25) through which they could reach whatever they needed, like their perfume.

(4:30) Working women, of course, also needed to carry around items that they might use (4:35) for whatever job or trade they were involved in, (4:38) but their pairs of pockets still remained on the inside of their clothing. (4:44) They just got bigger or longer, sometimes reaching down to their knees. (4:51) So, the tie-on pockets went well into the 19th century, (4:56) and only changed when fashion altered towards the end of that period.

(5:01) That's when dresses became tighter and less bulky, (5:06) and the pairs of pockets became very noticeable. (5:09) They stood out too much and detracted from the woman's image. (5:14) Women who had been used to carrying around a range of personal possessions, (5:19) and still wanted to, needed somewhere to carry these items about their person.

(5:25) That was when small bags, or pouches as they were known, came into fashion, (5:31) and, of course, they inevitably led onto the handbag of more modern times, (5:38) particularly when fashion removed pockets altogether.

Part 4 of 4

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