milliner - meaning and definition. What is milliner
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What (who) is milliner - definition

MANUFACTURE AND DESIGN OF HATS AND HEADWEAR
Milliner; Hatters; Hat maker; Hatmaker; Milliners; Milnary; Milinary; Millineries; Hattery; Millinery; Hatter; Hat-making; Hat making
  • ''[[The Millinery Shop]]'' by Edgar Degas
  • Millinery Department at the Lion Store of Toledo, Ohio, 1900s

milliner         
(milliners)
A milliner is a person whose job is making or selling women's hats.
N-COUNT
Milliner         
·noun A person, usually a woman, who makes, trims, or deals in hats, bonnets, headdresses, ·etc., for women.
II. Milliner ·noun Formerly, a man who imported and dealt in small articles of a miscellaneous kind, especially such as please the fancy of women.
milliner         
¦ noun a person who makes or sells women's hats.
Origin
ME (orig. in the sense 'a native of Milan', later 'a vendor of fancy goods from Milan'): from Milan + -er1.

Wikipedia

Hatmaking

Hat-making or millinery is the design, manufacture and sale of hats and other headwear. A person engaged in this trade is called a milliner or hatter.

Historically, milliners (typically women shopkeepers) produced or imported an inventory of garments for men, women, and children and sold these garments in a millinery shop. Many milliners worked both as milliners and as fashion designers, such as Rose Bertin (1747-1813), Jeanne Lanvin (1867-1946), and Coco Chanel (1883-1971).

The millinery industry benefited from industrialization during the nineteenth century. In 1889 in London and Paris, over 8,000 women were employed in millinery, and in 1900 in New York, some 83,000 people, mostly women, were employed in millinery. Though the improvements in technology provided benefits to milliners and the whole industry, essential skills, craftsmanship, and creativity are still required. Since the mass-manufacturing of hats began, the term "milliner" is usually used to describe a person who applies traditional hand-craftsmanship to design, make, sell or trim hats primarily for a mostly female clientele.

The term "milliner" or "Milener" originally meant someone from Milan, in northern Italy, in the early 16th century. It referred to Milanese merchants who sold fancy bonnets, gloves, jewellery and cutlery. In the 16th to 18th centuries, the meaning of "milliner" gradually changed in meaning from "a foreign merchant" to "a dealer in small articles relating to dress". Although the term originally applied to men, from 1713 "milliner" gradually came to mean a woman who makes and sells bonnets and other headgear for women.

Examples of use of milliner
1. "She once told Royal milliner Philip Somerville she had never once lost a hat.
2. It was the work of milliner Philip Treacy, one of many whose careers she helped launch.
3. His father was an oral surgeon and his mother, herself diabetic, a milliner.
4. And milliner Stephen Jones has also created a six centimetre–wide crystal–encrusted hat for the occasion, which floats five centimetres above the head.
5. Even Princess Anne looked stylish compared to the Countess‘s oversized corsage creation by milliner Philip Treacy, thought to cost around 800.