Atlas of Polish folk costumes    
           
Атлас польских народных костюмов Atlas Polskich Strojow Ludowych    
           
Polish 1949        
Size, cm. 22 x 31        
Weight, g. 2 820        
Pages           
Copies           
Cover paperback        
Condition good        
           
1. Strój Górali Szczawnickich Roman Reinfuss Lublin 1949
 2. Strój dolnośląski (Pogórze) Tadeusz Seweryn Lublin 1950
 4. Strój szamotulski Adam Glapa Lublin 1951
 5. Strój krzczonowski Janusz Świeży Poznań 1952
 6. Strój kurpiowski Puszczy Białej Maria Żywirska Poznań 1952
 7. Strój łowicki Jadwiga Świątkowska Poznań 1953
 8. Strój dzierżacki Adam Glapa Poznań 1953
 9. Strój kujawski Halina Mikułowska        Poznań 1953
10. Strój spiski         Edyta Starek                   Poznań 1954
11. Strój piotrkowski Jan Piotr Dekowski Wrocław 1954
12. Strój pszczyński Stanisław Bronicz Wrocław 1954

Atlas of Polish Folk Costumes - a publishing series of the Polish Ethnological Society, published since 1949. As part of the series, notebooks are published, which are a detailed study of folk costumes from individual regions of Poland. So far, 48 issues have been published.
Beginnings
The beginning of the series dates back to 1949, when Józef Gajek[1] initiated the first issue of the Atlas of Polish Folk Costumes. It was the costume of the Szczawnica Highlanders by Roman Reinfuss[2].
Goals
The purpose of creating the Atlas was to list the repetitive types of clothing and to determine the time and place of their occurrence. All Atlas notebooks have been grouped by the following regions:
Pomerania
Greater Poland
Silesia
Mazowsze and Sieradzkie
Lesser Poland.
Each of the costumes was to be distinguished due to its characteristics, which allowed it to be separated from the costumes from neighboring areas. The aim of the publication was to describe both ceremonial and ceremonial costumes, as well as everyday clothes used for household and field work. The task of the authors was also to take into account the diversity of the outfit depending on the age, financial status of the wearer or the seasons of the year. At the time when successive issues of the Atlas were published, conferences were organized during which previous editions were analyzed. The publishing team was also striving to develop a detailed instruction for future authors of the monograph. Its final version was created by Józef Gajek with the help of Roman Reinfuss in 1952. In the same year, it was printed in the "Lud" magazine under the title Methodology of monographic development of folk costumes[3]. In the introductory remarks to the manual, Gajek pointed out the errors visible in the notebooks published so far. As he wrote, they concerned the wrong connection of the ethnographic group under study with only one type of costume.
 
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