wearing a double-breasted overfrock with velvet collar and pointed lapels. The over-frock was the standard overcoat for much of the Victorian era and until after the
First World War. Its popularity mirrored the
frock coat, which replaced the
tailcoat (
justacorps) as day wear in the 1850s. The frock coat, often attributed to the result of the fashion influence of the
Regency dandy
George Bryan 'Beau' Brummell, was almost universally black, and was worn with
waistcoat and trousers, which could be of any colour. Black coat, waistcoat, and trousers - "frock suits" - were worn only for funerals (as a '
mourning suit') and the most
formal of occasions. The trousers that went with it - what would be known as
formal trousers - could either be checked or striped, or have no pattern at all. The frock coat, and with it the over-frock, was increasingly rarely worn as
casual wear towards the end of the 19th century, as the "
sack suit", the comparatively loose modern suit was adopted for
leisure wear, and the
morning coat, originally for
equestrian use, replaced it for some formal events. By 1926, when King
George V wore a morning coat to the opening of the
Chelsea flower show, the frock coat was barely ever worn, and with it the over-frock. In 1936 King
Edward VIII removed it from official
British royal court dress codes. The over-frock, like other body coats, could not survive the increasing cost of the
bespoke tailoring required to make it fit properly around the waist to create the classical "hour-glass" silhouette. In the first decades of the 20th century, it was replaced by sack overcoats like the
Chesterfield coat, the
guard's coat, and the
Ulster coat and the
Inverness coats and such, mirroring the change from frock coats to modern suit jackets. The expensive over-frock became impractical in comparison. ==References==