diving dress - meaning and definition. What is diving dress
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What (who) is diving dress - definition

RUBBERISED CANVAS DIVING SUIT WITH COPPER HELMET AND WEIGHTED BOOTS
Deep-sea diving; Standard diving suit; Standard diving gear; Standard diving; Hardhat diving; Three bolt equipment; John Brown rig; Hardhat diver; Standard Diving Dress; Hard Hat diving; Three-bolts equipment; Diving dress; Three-bolt equipment; Standard Diver Dress; Standard Dress; Standard diving equipment; Standard diving helmet; RN Diving Manual; Standard helmet; Spitcock; Deep-sea diving costume; Deep sea diving costume; Deep sea diving suit; Deep-sea diving suit; Helmet squeeze
  • Diver telephone c.1911
  • Dräger three-bolt ''bubikopf'' helmet in use for surface supplied diving
  • Cave diving equipment from 1935 in the museum at [[Wookey Hole Caves]]
  • Helmeted diver entering the water. He has a back mounted Draeger DM40 rebreather system in addition to the surface supply air hose (2010)
  • Manually operated diver's air pump, made by [[Siebe Gorman]], UK
  • 1842 sketch of the Deane brothers' diving helmet, the first practical surface-supplied diving equipment.
  • Siebe's]] improved design in 1873, from the ''[[Illustrated London News]]''. The helmet's basic features can be seen: A helmet, supplied with air from the surface, and a waterproof suit. The corselet of the helmet is clamped onto the suit with wingnuts, which can be seen being tightened by one of the support crew on the left of the picture.
  • Air supplied from the boat by manually operated pump
  • Weighted shoes
  • Dräger DM 20
  • Diver dressed in except for helmet c.1950
  • Copper four light, twelve bolt diving helmet with threaded connection between bonnet and corselet
  • Twelve bolt helmet, showing the spit-cock
  • Corselet showing interrupted thread for helmet connection and brails (straps) clamping it to the suit. Six bolt front right, twelve bolt back left (1958)
  • Harbour diver – civil engineering and ship maintenance in three bolt dress. Note the bolted connection between helmet and chest plate
  • Russian three bolt helmet
  • Manual air pump for Standard diving equipment
  • Three models of shallow water helmet by [[Miller-Dunn]]
  • Pressure gauge on Siebe Gorman manual diver's pump, indicating delivered pressure in pounds per square inch (black) and feet sea water (red)
  • A sponge diver with weights slung over corselet on ropes,
Tarpon Springs, Florida (1999)
  • Drägerwerk AG]] (Germany)

Standard diving dress         
Standard diving dress, also known as hard-hat or copper hat equipment, deep sea diving suit or heavy gear, is a type of diving suit that was formerly used for all relatively deep underwater work that required more than breath-hold duration, which included marine salvage, civil engineering, pearl shell diving and other commercial diving work, and similar naval diving applications. Standard diving dress has largely been superseded by lighter and more comfortable equipment.
Victorian dress reform         
  • 'The Emancipation Waist.'  Excerpt from 'Catalog of Dress Reform and Other Sanitary Under-Garments For Ladies and Children' George Frost and Co., Boston Mass June 1, 1876.
  • Dress forms being constructed in idealized feminine form, Kalamazoo Corset Company (1912)
  • [[hakama]]}}
WOMEN'S CLOTHING DESIGNED AS A PRACTICAL AND HEALTHFUL ALTERNATIVE TO THE HIGH FASHION OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY
Dress reform; Rational dress; Rational dress movement; Dress reform parlor; Reform dress; Dress reform movement; Cycling suit
Victorian dress reform was an objective of the Victorian dress reform movement (also known as the rational dress movement) of the middle and late Victorian era, led by various reformers who proposed, designed, and wore clothing considered more practical and comfortable than the fashions of the time.
Full dress uniform         
  • service dress]] as their full dress uniform.
  • The rise of [[rifle]]s and [[smokeless powder]] led to the adoption of [[khaki]] uniforms in the field, with blue, scarlet, and rifle green tunics relegated to ceremonial/parade use.
  • Infantry uniforms of the [[British Army]], from 1750 to 1835. Full dress uniforms in the British Army originate from former combat uniforms.
  • Though full dress uniform in the [[Chilean Army]] typically is ''[[feldgrau]]'', some units wear more colorful uniforms; here, a ceremonial cavalry unit wears a dress uniform based on an early twentieth-century uniform of German [[dragoons]].
  • Members of the [[United States Coast Guard]] in Full Dress Blue during a change of command ceremony at [[Coast Guard Base Kodiak]].
  • Former [[Indonesian Army]] general [[Gatot Nurmantyo]] dressed in PDU I, the [[Indonesian Army]]'s equivalent to full dress uniform
  • Swedish Life Guards]] in full dress uniform
  • Officer cadets at the [[Royal Military Academy Sandhurst]] in full dress.
  • Members of the [[Argentine Navy]] in full dress.
  • Members of the [[First Troop Philadelphia City Cavalry]] in ceremonial dress uniform.
  • [[Russian Ground Forces]] officers during the [[2019 Moscow Victory Day Parade]] in full dress uniform.
  • Enlisted marines dressed in Blue Dress Uniforms. From left to right: "B", "B", "A", "D", and "C".
  • scarlet tunic]], [[midnight blue]] trousers, and a [[Wolseley helmet]].
  • Republican Guard]] infantry in full dress uniform.
  • Band]] members of the [[Royal Military College of Canada]] in full dress.
  • Two officers in full dress on the royal barge ''Vasaorden''. In the [[Swedish Navy]], full dress is restricted to naval officers serving on the ''Vasaorden''
  • Members of the [[Australia's Federation Guard]] in ceremonial dress
  • Individuals leading a group of [[St John Ambulance of Malaysia]] (SJAM) volunteers wearing SJAM's ceremonial uniform.
  • [[Air Vice-Marshal]] [[Philip Game]] in full dress, c. 1930. At the time, the [[Royal Air Force]]'s full dress included headgear that resembled helmets used in [[World War I]].
  • The Band of Her Majesty's Royal Marines in full dress uniform, led by the Drum Major (centre) and Director of Music (right)
  • doublet]]s
  • Enlisted sailors of the [[United States Navy]] in Full Dress Whites during a retirement ceremony.
  • Dress uniform for the Marine Corps Mounted Color Guard consists of a blue dress coat, white [[breeches]], and polished knee-high boots.
  • [[Vice Admiral]] [[Philip Watson]] in ceremonial day dress. Introduced in 1960, ceremonial day dress is a variant of the [[Royal Navy]]'s full dress uniform that was taken out of service in 1956.
  • The Waterloo Band of [[The Rifles]] in full dress. The Rifles continue to use [[rifle green]] in their full dress uniform.
UNIFORM FOR WEAR ON FORMAL OCCASIONS
Full dress uniforms; Ceremonial full dress; Full Dress uniform; Dress Uniform; Undress uniform; Undress Uniform; Class A uniform; Dress uniforms; Military jacket; Class As; Parade dress; Regimental (uniform); Home Service Dress; Dress uniform; Blue dress uniform; Full-dress
Full dress uniform, also known as a ceremonial dress uniform or parade dress uniform, is the most formal type of uniforms used by military, police, fire and other public uniformed services for official parades, ceremonies, and receptions, including private ones such as marriages and funerals. Full dress uniforms typically include full-size orders and medals insignia.

Wikipedia

Standard diving dress

Standard diving dress, also known as hard-hat or copper hat equipment, deep sea diving suit or heavy gear, is a type of diving suit that was formerly used for all relatively deep underwater work that required more than breath-hold duration, which included marine salvage, civil engineering, pearl shell diving and other commercial diving work, and similar naval diving applications. Standard diving dress has largely been superseded by lighter and more comfortable equipment.

Standard diving dress consists of a diving helmet made from copper and brass or bronze, clamped over a watertight gasket to a waterproofed canvas suit, an air hose from a surface-supplied manually operated pump or low pressure breathing air compressor, a diving knife, and weights to counteract buoyancy, generally on the chest, back and shoes. Later models were equipped with a diver's telephone for voice communications with the surface. The term deep sea diving was used to distinguish diving with this equipment from shallow water diving using a shallow water helmet, which was not sealed to the suit.

Some variants used rebreather systems to extend the use of gas supplies carried by the diver, and were effectively self-contained underwater breathing apparatus, and others were suitable for use with helium based breathing gases for deeper work. Divers could be deployed directly by lowering or raising them using the lifeline, or could be transported on a diving stage. Most diving work using standard dress was done heavy, with the diver sufficiently negatively buoyant to walk on the bottom, and the suits were not capable of the fine buoyancy control needed for mid-water swimming.