The dress reform movement spread from the United States and Great Britain to the Nordic countries in the 1880s and from Germany to Austria and the Netherlands. The issue was internationally addressed at the
International Congress for Women's Work and Women's Endeavors in Berlin 1896, in which Germany, America, Belgium, Denmark, England, Finland, Russia, Sweden, Switzerland, and Hungary participated.
Austria In Austria the dress reform movement was connected to the
Arts and Crafts movement, when the
Wiener Secession was founded in 1897 by progressive artists in opposition to the
Künstlerhaus.
Josef Hoffman,
Koloman Moser,
Otto Wagner,
Alfred Roller and
Hermann Bahr supported dress reform, which they expressed in the
Dokumente der Frauen in 1902, and some of them contributed with reform dress designs.
Denmark In Denmark, the
bloomer costume was adopted for girls' sports wear during ice skating already in the 1860s. While there were no separate dress reform societies founded in Denmark, the women's rights society
Dansk Kvindesamfund actively addressed the issue under the influence of
the Swedish Dress Reform Society in the 1880s; they published their own
brochure,
Om Sundheden og Kyindedraegten by J. Frisch, collaborated with Stockholm and Oslo with the design of reform costumes and the exposition of them, notably during the
Nordic Exhibition of 1888.
Finland While there were no separate dress reform societies founded in Finland, the women's rights society
Suomen Naisyhdistys actively addressed the issue under the influence of
the Swedish Dress Reform Society in the 1880s; they held lectures in many Finnish cities, managed to have the reform costume accepted as sports wear in the girls' schools of the capital by 1887, and was awarded the grand silver medal for their reform costume for school girls in the exhibition of the Russian Hygienic Society in
Saint Petersburg in 1893. She adapted the clothing worn by ladies-in-waiting at the Japanese imperial court to make a uniform for her
Jissen Women's University. During the
Meiji period (1868–-1912) and
Taishō period (1912–-1926), other women's schools also adopted the . It became
standard wear for high schools in Japan, though it was later mostly replaced with Western sailor-style uniforms.
Inokuchi Akuri also designed sports clothes for children. At the imperial court, simplified replaced more cumbersome garments.
The Netherlands In the Netherlands, interest for the issue was aroused after the foundation of a dress reform society in neighboring Germany, and in 1899 the Dutch dress reform society
Vereeniging voor Verbetering van Vrouwenkleeding (V.v.V.v.V.). After an initial attempt to launch a reform costume, the Swedish dress reform movement focused on a reform of women's underwear, particularly the corset. The Swedish reform dress movement corresponded with their equivalent in Great Britain as well as the American dress reform movement of
Annie Jenness Miller. The dress reform movement did achieve some success in Sweden; by the 1890s, corsets were no longer accepted for the pupils of the Swedish girls' schools, and the leading Swedish fashion designer Augusta Lundin reported that her clients no longer subjected themselves to tight lacing. ==Eventual shifts in fashion==