Chapter Seven - Irish Step Dancing Dresses: Styles and Their Circulation As Commodities
Chapter Seven - Irish Step Dancing Dresses: Styles and Their Circulation As Commodities
Chapter Seven - Irish Step Dancing Dresses: Styles and Their Circulation As Commodities
Present-day Irish step dancing solo dresses, which are the costumes worn by
uninitiated. For example, Jessica Tomell-Presto, who was, in the late 1990s and early
2000s, a doctoral student and an adult student of Irish step dancing, recounted her first
visit to a feis and her reactions to the solo dresses in particular, saying, “When I was
finally at the feis, the sea of identical curls and the outrageous colors of the costumes
were shocking. I stood gaping at the dancers… The dresses were gaudy. The amount of
comments clearly come from a middle class point of view about display of the female
dancing body. Nonetheless, her reactions are not necessarily unusual. Irish step dancing
costumes have developed in very unique and specific ways. Furthermore, the pace of
these changes has accelerated in the wake of Riverdance. The following chapter provides
a rough chronology of developments in the style and construction of Irish step dancing
costumes, with a particular focus on the 1990s and the 2000s. The final sections of the
chapter describe and assess developments in accessories such as wigs, tiaras, false tan,
and makeup.
dancers in the late 1960s or early 1970s. Prior to this point, it was usual for a dancer to
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wear a school dress for all competitions. According to Cullinane, one of the functions of
the solo dress was to “confuse adjudicators” (1996: 53). That is, when dancers could be
identified according to their school dress, some adjudicators would discriminate against
or in favor of dancers from a particular school. When dancers could not be identified
according to their school, they faced less of this type of discrimination. Through the
1970s and 1980s, according to Cullinane, “most dancers posess[ed] more than one solo
costume” (1996: 53). However, as dresses became increasingly complex, the cost of
dancing dresses became so high as to prohibit this practice (1996: 53). In the 1970s and
1980s, and even into the early 1990s, it was not unusual for dancers’ solo dresses to be
made in the home, often by mothers or other relatives. However, since the late 1980s,
Embroidery has been used on dancing dresses since the 1920s. According to
Cullinane, “up to the mid 1980s embroidery was still very modest in quantity, style and
colour. Since the mid 1980s, the amount of embroidery on female Irish step dancing
costumes has increased about ten fold” (1996: 49). Cullinane states that appliqué was
introduced “as recent as the late 1980s” (1996:49). According to Frank Whelan, who
describes costuming in his 2000 book, The Complete Guide to Irish Dance, the most
popular fabrics for solo dresses in the 1980s were dark navy and black velvet. Whelan
suggests that these colors were popular because “dark colours showed off the embroidery
at its best” (41). Class or school dresses were, in contrast to solo dresses, sometimes
made out of polyester, wool, or gabardine, came in a variety of colors, and featured less
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embroidery. Crochet cuffs and collars were also commonplace on both class and solo
dresses in the 1980s and early 1990s. Dancing dresses were often decorated with crystals
or diamantes. These would be glued or hammered onto the dress at key places in the
embroidery pattern.
In the 1980s and early 1990s in the Western United States Region, patterns for a
variety of solo and school dresses were sometimes created out of modified cheerleading
dress patterns. Some dancers continue to make less elaborate “performance dresses” out
appliqué and embroidery in the late 1980s were commercially available through Irish step
dancing markets. One such design company was Seven Gates. A dressmaker
(professional or family) could iron on these patterns and then hand-embroider over them,
directly onto the material of the dress. Some dressmakers were producing costumes
commercially at this time, but the proportion of dresses that were made in the home
from both Cullinane and my own personal collection suggests that dresses were made by
hand more often in the early 1980s, that commercial dressmakers gained more
prominence in the 1980s, and that by approximately the mid-1990s the proportion of
dancers wearing homemade dresses was becoming significantly less than those wearing
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Irish step dancing costumes have never ceased to change and develop. Historic
dress trends for the twentieth century are extensively documented by John Cullinane in
his 1996 book, Irish Dancing Costumes: Their Origins and Evolution. Some of these
changes can be connected to contemporaneous fashion trends. For example, many dresses
feature starker linear designs. In contrast, the growing height and curliness of hair in the
1980s resembles the vogue for perms during that period. However, many of the dancing
dress trends seem to have evolved within their own, specific, Irish dancing paradigm—
which was nevertheless continually being updated. The styles of dancing dresses worn in
the 1920s would have been out of place in the 1940s, and those from the 1940s would
have been outdated in the 1960s. However, the pace of change in these eras seems to
have been far slower than the pace of the 1990s and the 2000s. This increase in rate of
professional production of Irish step dancing costumes, the impetus (provided by the
transition from class dresses to solo dresses) to create individualized designs, and
increasing communication and contact among dancers through major championships and,
in the turn of the millenium, media sources such as magazines and the internet.
IRISH STEP DANCING DRESSES FROM THE EARLY 1990S AND LATE 2000S:
Riverdance emerged in 1994, and after its debut, Irish step dancing became
increasingly popular. The emergence of Riverdance in this year is also important because
it coincides with the beginnings of a trend of massive growth in the Irish economy known
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as the Celtic Tiger. Finally, the internet began to be more widely used on a global scale in
the mid to late 1990s, as access grew throughout the developed world, and it impacted
consumption trends worldwide. It is the contention of this thesis that all three of these
Coincidentally, 1994 was also the year in which An Coimisiún celebrated the
This event is unique in that it was videotaped and the videotapes of the event were sold to
the consumer market by teacher Olive Hurley, A.D.C.R.G, under the title World Irish
releasing a videotape may not seem unique in an era where sports competitions, including
gymnastics and figure skating, were regularly broadcast on television. However, Irish
step dancing rules specifically forbid the videotaping of competitions. Thus, it is unusual
for Irish step dancing events to be offered on videotapes. Because the championships of
1994 were documented in this manner, there is much more information available about
The World Championships of 1994 were held only weeks before the Riverdance
segment was performed at the Eurovision Song Contest. Thus, these World
Championships were the last major Irish step dancing events held before the emergence
of the Riverdance phenomenon. Because of the multiple factors that the year 1994
represents, it seems an adequate place to begin an analysis of trends and changes that
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The video of the 25th Anniversary shows competitors at the Worlds wearing a
variety of costumes featuring extensive embroidery, appliqué, and crystals. Although the
dancing dresses worn by competitors in the World Championships of 1994 are quite
elaborate taken on their own merits, it should be noted that in comparison to those of the
twenty-first century the dresses of 1994 were much duller and more demure. However,
some, such as John Cullinane, already considered Irish step dancing costumes in the early
Although other materials are apparent, the champion dress worn by many dancers
in the 1994 World Championships (as displayed in the videographic evidence) was made
of heavy velvet with a princess bodice, a crochet collar, a split panel in the front of the
full skirt, and an embroidered shawl lined with satin. The dresses ranged in color but
most dress bases were somber blacks or blues, or slightly brighter reds and whites. There
was also the occasional green dress, such as the one worn by (future Riverdance lead)
Jean Butler.
The dresses were decorated with Celtic birds and animals, as well as knotwork
inspired by the Book of Kells. Some of these dresses were machine embroidered, and
others were hand embroidered. Though the dresses were relatively similar in silhouette
and design, each dress had its own individual features. A dress may have had a scalloped
shawl, a shiny silver lining, appliqué, an acid green satin lining, a silver or gold shawl or
collar. However, these features peeked through from the insides and ends of the dresses;
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1994 World Champions Aoife Curley and Fiona Harold wore very distinct
dresses. Each was made of orange velvet and black velvet, with the middle panel and
bodice contrasting with the outer panels conveying the impression of a stripe down the
middle. The dresses featured machine embroidery and a contrasting band of orange
velvet around the hem, and each had distinctive embroidered cuffs. The machine
embroidery on Fiona Harold’s dress showed a graphic image instead of knotwork. The
two dresses stood out clearly from the crowd as a new and emerging trend.
In comparison, the Riverdance costume aesthetic of the same year was both
glamorous and stripped down. In many ways, it was the antithesis of contemporary Irish
step dancing costumes. Some championship Irish step dancers initially favored
Riverdance-style dresses, which were shorter—to the middle of the thigh, as opposed to
the knee—streamlined, and focused on lush fabrics and graphically spartan designs.
These dresses were not embroidered, but rather were adorned with glittering textures.
Rather than being heavily stiffened, the skirts on these dresses flared subtly from the hip.
According to Martha Robb, a few Riverdance-style costumes were seen at the World
Championships in 1997 (31). The reaction of An Coimisiún was to quickly make sure
that Irish step dancing costumes did not go the route of Riverdance by mandating the
length of dresses and the types of acceptable fabrics. Although simpler, albeit longer,
Riverdance-style dresses are still used by adult dancers in competition today and by some
schools in shows, they have largely been ignored by champion step dancers who continue
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Irish Step Dancing Dress Changes From the Late 1990s to the Mid-to-Late 2000s
During the last few years of the 1990s, Irish step dancing costumes changed
swiftly and significantly. Muted velvet and satin fabrics, accompanied by embroidered
emblems resembling the Book of Kells emblems, gave way to a succession of trends
including cartoons, glitter ball fabric, and lamé appliqué. Comparatively somber and soft
hues and fabrics gave way to an ever-increasing shine, which grew more intense in the
early 2000s. Later in the 2000s, dancing dresses began to be more abstract in design and
began to include a wider variety of fabric textures. The main changes in solo dress design
that I have observed and gathered from a variety of media are detailed in a chart.
Source material from that informs the chart data includes Irish step dancing
such as Dance.net, and personal experience from competing in Irish dancing from 1992
to 2003, and also attending major championships such as the Nationals and the
Oireachtas in 2005 and 2006. In these latter championships, I spent hours in the rooms set
aside for costume re-sale, going through all of the dresses and photographing many, as
There is also a wealth of websites dedicated to the sale of Irish dancing dresses.
Some of these are managed by particular designers and companies, such as Gavin
are also a number of websites that re-sell used dancing dresses, such as Dance-again.com
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Dance Exchange (http://www.irishdancingexchange.com/)—in operation from 2005 to
present/2008.
There are several websites that offer professional pictures from competitions
ranging from major Irish step dancing championships to local feiseanna, including
company that is frequently contracted for the North American Nationals and for regional
Oireachtasi. Finally, the website for the World Irish Dancing Championships
For the sake of simplification, many of the trends observed have been
consolidated into a chart following a linear time progression. Although there is a certain
margin of error in the choice to assign one trend to one point in time, and exclude
another, I provide this chart to detail some of the scope of designs, fabrication methods,
and materials used in Irish dancing costumes during the period, as well as the rapidity
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Chart Eight—Irish Dancing Trends from the Mid-1990s to the Late 2000s
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Brands, Mass Manufacture, and the Bids for Individuality
Many dresses in the 1990s were still manufactured as unique designs that were
composed for a particular dancer. However, some dressmakers began to offer ready to
wear dresses that featured designs that were repeated from dress to dress. Drafting a new
design for every single dress is a complicated endeavor that requires a great deal of effort
and skill. However, the graphic (cartoon) nature of some of these designs made them
easily recognizable. Examples of this phenomenon included dresses from Seven Gates
Designs of Drogheda. According to Irish dancing dress historian Martha Robb, “At the
World Championships of 1996, Seven Gates Designs launched a new range of designs
based on the legends of the Salmon of Knowledge, the Death of Brian Ború, Setanta and
the Hound of Culann and the Legend of Gráinne and Dairmuid” (29). The mass-
production of dresses in repeated designs lowered some of the costs associated with the
manufacture of dancing dresses, enabling cheaper prices. However, among dancers there
someone else’s Irish step dancing dress. Although evidence on this point is drawn from
personal experience and dialogue, dancers seem to be very wary of wearing a dress
exactly similar to another in the area, and, indeed, some dancers place restrictions on
resale. A dress whose reputation was garnered by an association with a particular dancer
generally will not be sold in the same region, because dancers do not want to wear
dresses that can be instantly recognized. This preference raised conflicts, and continues to
do so, between the constraints imposed by a family’s income and the desire to have a
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During the 1990s, individual design companies began to be known as “brands.”
These “brands are given preference on resale websites and are heavily discussed on
by dancers, teachers, and adjudicators. Threads of Green and Thomond Dancewear are
some of the brands that Martha Robb cites from the mid- to late-1990s (29). Threads of
Green was so popular that dancers often had to sit on a waiting list for up to two years to
get a dress from the company. The company Siopa Rince also emerged during the late
1990s as a design powerhouse whose dresses were highly sought after. The reputations of
these particular companies were solidified by media coverage in the newly emerged Irish
In the present, there continue to be certain companies whose costumes are highly
sought after and are often quite expensive. In 2007, three of the most powerful design
houses are Siopa Rince, Gavin Doherty (Eire Designs), and Elevation Designs. Dancers
at the top levels of the World Championships often wear dresses by these designers—but
the prices of these dresses ($1800 and upwards) are quite prohibitive for some dancers.
FALSE TAN
In the post-Riverdance era, a range of products and beauty treatments became part
of the standard gear and competition preparation regimen for Irish step dancers. These
products include wigs, tanning gels, tiaras, and glitter make-up. Although these
accessories are not the focus of this thesis, any examination of Irish step dancing
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Wigs
One major example of a change in accessories came in the form of wigs. Earlier
in the 1990s and in the 1980s, Irish step dancers performed complicated rituals with
regards to the preparation of their hair. The desired effect was spiral ringlets—very
similar to a young Shirley Temple’s, which bounced along to accentuate every step.
Dancers routinely slept on curlers the night before competitions, often wearing their pink
foam rollers for days in advance. Later in the 1990s, specialized curlers for Irish step
dancers known as Soft Spikes were developed. They were unusual in that they did not
have a plastic or metal rod inside of them. They were long spikes of foam, which, when
in place on the head, stuck out perpendicular to the head and gave the dancer a space-age
in her Hornpipe Magazine column, “Ask Eimir,” in response to a question about what to
expect at a feis. Eimir replied in part, that according to a younger dancer’s brother, one
should anticipate seeing dancers who look like, “Martians with spikes growing out of
their heads and dresses that light up in the dark” (5). However, many dancers found hair
curling to be a tiresome affair. Although some dancers voiced mixed responses to the
introduction of Irish step dance wigs in the late 1990s, hairpieces eventually became
Culture Magazine succinctly described the train of thought that often accompanied this
switch, stating, “Oh the wonder of wigs! No longer do you have to have an
uncomfortable night's sleep before a competition, constantly feeling curlers digging into
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your head. Instead you can just put your hair up and slip a wig on.” (42). Michael
sentiments about the ease of wigs in a September 2003 Irish Dancing International
interview, stating, “Having had three sisters and knowing the pain they went through with
curling, I think wigs are quite a good alternative!” (18-23). When wigs were initially
introduced, there was a period during which the proportions of the wigs were not settled.
During the late 1990s and early 2000s, wigs worn by dancers seemed often unrealistically
long. That is, the curls would extend down to the middle of the waist—a length of hair
that few if any dancers could naturally attain through the curing of their own hair. As the
decade progressed, the wigs worn in competition became slightly shorter, ending
approximately an inch below the shoulders, and the curls in the wigs became tighter and
more ringlet-like. When wigs proved to be a successful product, Irish step dancing
entrepreneurs began to develop their own specialized styles and models, which they then
Dancers began to supplement their look by attaching multiple wigs to the head, or
placing objects such as socks underneath the wig to give it a fuller appearance. As a
result, wig manufacturers began to market wigs with multiple heads’ worth of hair on one
wig. Likely the pinnacle of this trend was the appearance of wigs that contained three
times the amount of hair in one single wig. One such “triple wig” is the Grainne, offered
in addition, tend to dwarf the heads of younger dancers. 1 Throughout this period, the
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intended effect was a full, lustrous head of curls which would accentuate the movements
of the dancer by bouncing in tandem with skips and leaps. In addition, these wigs helped
dancers achieve a very child-like image, similar in effect to the curls of the
In the 1990s, dancers generally wore fabric tiara-shaped headbands that matched
their dresses. However, since the early 2000s, metal tiaras with rhinestones have become
increasingly popular. While tiaras are sometimes worn alone (generally with a wig), the
most common style is a tiara worn in front of a headband, which is also in the shape of a
crown and is often decorated with the motifs and fabrics of the dress. Both of these
elements of headgear sit in front of the wig. Indeed, the large fabric crown often serves to
disguise the “seam” between the dancer’s “real” hair and her wig hair—Irish step dancers
The headband can be so wide, and worn so low, that it may cover the hairline
entirely. This is a particularly useful function for dancers who perform with wigs that are
not the same as their actual hair color. Dancers may often also attach additional
adornments to the head, including bands of stretch sequins, three dimensional fabric
flowers, and snap-in jewels. Dancers are often also concerned with the pattern that their
bangs are arranged in, and there are fashionable styles for Irish step dancing bangs such
as the “swoop,” in which all of the bangs are combed over to the side and held in place by
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Again, the use of tiaras and crowns contributes to the effect of making the
play.
The use of false tan, such as tans obtained either from a bottle, or tans
step dancers. In addition, bright makeup, such as eye shadow that matches the dancer’s
dress and sparkle creams are often used to further extend the general effect of the
dancer’s appearance. In 1996, John Cullinane noted what might be perceived as the
beginnings of this trend, stating, “It is now a common feature to see very young dancers
(even eight to ten years old) wearing heavy make up including bright red lipstick” (1996:
83).
Young dancers are commonly seen wearing makeup, even though An Coimisiún
passed a rule in 2005 banning the use of both makeup and false tan for dancers under the
age of 10. In a September 2005 column, one anonymous Irish step dancing parent
However, several parents and dancing officials have been concerned by what might be
perceived as the excessive use of makeup by children. Some of their concern likely
relates to the perception that the use of makeup on children makes Irish step dancing
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competitions resemble beauty pageants. These sentiments are expressed expressed
explicitly in a response to a "Web Letter of the Month" printed in Irish Dancing and
Culture International in October, 2005, in which a dancer from Canada decried some of
the image requirements for Irish dancing, stating, “I think competitions are becoming
more like beauty pageants. Dancers go to the extreme to look the best, but shouldn't the
winner be the best dancer, not the best looking?” (8). The comment was in direct
response to a letter suggesting that the emphasis on tanning had perhaps gone to the
extreme.
Koblenzer, M.D., discusses some societal rationales for the practice of tanning, for the
Koblenzer states that “the presence or absence of a tan, as we shall see, transmits a
message about desired status, rank, or lifestyle” (424). Tanning was increasingly
associated throughout the twentieth century “with status and wealth,” especially after
celebrity designer Coco Chanel promoted the practice (424). Tans also began to be
Juliet McMains examines the ways in which tanning practices of Latin dancesport
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anything else. The tanning regimes of these dancers enable them to wear this conception
uniquely portrays the world of tanning practices as embodied with significance. She also
describes some of the reasons that dancesport competitors give for their tanning
regimes—some of which are similar to the rationales offered in Irish dancing. She states
that dancers suggest that tanning practices “give pale skin a healthy glow under harsh
bright lights” (54). She also suggests that dancesport competitors legitimate their own
[who] also use tanning creams when they display their body for formal evaluation” (54).
McMains also suggests that these practices are aligned with “sites of upper-class
recreation” (54). Finally, she suggests that tanning practices act as a way of covering the
bare exposed flesh of dancers, “perhaps covering the nearly naked dancing bodies with
the role of tanning practices in Irish dancing cultures is beyond the scope of this thesis,
the latter two angles seem to offer scope for interpretation of Irish step dancing tanning.
Tanning in Irish competitive dancing does not seem to have become widespread until the
late 1990s or early 2000s. During the same time period, Irish dancing dresses were
becoming considerably more costly. It might be logical that tanning practices are a part of
Furthermore, the idea that tanning creams may cover the flesh of dancers and act in lieu
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of a different garment is interesting in light of the Catholic Irish inclination, expressed
through other elements of Irish dancing costuming, to fully cover the body
In sum, Irish step dancing costumes changed significantly throughout the 1990s
and 2000s. Some of these changes included the designs featured on dresses, the methods
used to decorate dresses, and the fabrics used in the construction of dresses. Dresses also
moved from being constructed in small-scale operations, often in family homes, to being
constructed professionally. Irish step dancing accessories also changed over the time
period. They presently include somewhat controversial additions such as wigs, tiaras,
false tan, and bright makeup, several of which operate to reinforce or consolidate child-
Irish step dancing dresses have become increasingly commodified since the
1980s. That is, they have increasingly been bought and sold as commercial goods on an
open, international market. While Irish step dancing costumes were once made primarily
in the home or for small, local markets, they now are shipped from sellers in areas such
as Australia to buyers in areas such as the United States. In addition, new magazines
exploring Irish step dancing in the late 1990s displayed Irish step dancing commodities
The relatively new status of Irish step dancing dresses as commodities holds
implications for the ways in which people conceive of them and interact with them. One
concern that has been raised by teachers, adjudicators, parents, and dancers, is that Irish
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discussed below, suggest that the increasing cost of Irish step dancing costumes may act
to limit the participation of dancers who may not be able to afford them, in contradiction
The 1990s transition in the ways that Irish step dancing dresses are acquired by
they represent. Scholars Barra Ó Cinnéide and Barbara O’Connor have noted that Irish
step dancing changed culturally when the producers of shows such as Riverdance
transformed the practice into successful mass-market enterprises. Irish step dancing
dresses have also been transformed as they have been commodified. Scholar Marilyn
Halter argues that the concept of ethnicity has been increasingly offered as a “product” to
cultural markets. Diane Negra and others suggest that Irishness has been changed as it
has been “sold” as a commodity to United States consumers. These observations raise
questions about the nature of dancing dresses as cultural goods. For example, do Irish
step dancing dresses represent a form of commodified Irish ethnicity? The second half of
this chapter attempts to address some of the questions that have been raised about the
The prices of Irish step dancing costumes increased dramatically over the 1990s
and 2000s. During this period, Irish step dancing became more popular around the globe,
and a broader market for the sale of Irish step dancing goods developed. As a result of the
Celtic Tiger economic boom, the average income of citizens of the Republic of Ireland
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In the video documenting the 1994 World Championships, Kirsty Blair, who is
cited as a ‘London dancer and costume manufacturer,’ remarked upon the dresses she
sold at the time. She said, “This is a tip (sic) kind of open costume that top open dancers
would wear. Obviously, the intermediate and primary dancers would wear a much
simpler dress at a much lesser cost, but they range from about 3-500 pounds.” According
to Martha Robb, in 1998, “the average price of a class costume [was] ₤350. Solo dresses,
however, if heavily embroidered and with diamantes and unique features, [could] cost
₤800 or more. (32). By June of 2005, when commentators on Dance.net examined the
phenomenon in a post entitled “who has the most expensive solo dress??,” it was
suggested the most expensive dress that was known at the time may have retailed for US
$3,500 (₤2,000). And, several dancers talked about seeing and buying used dresses
and AUS $2,500. An article entitled “A Dress for Less!,” printed in the September 2005
issue of Irish Dancing and Culture International, confirmed these figures. The author
states, “Everyone knows Irish dancing dresses cost a packet—Dancers (sic) spend
anything up to 2500 British pounds on a costume and champion dancers are changing
outfits every year!” (46). The following pair of charts is intended to further show a
portion of the range of Irish step dancing costume prices. The first chart displays prices of
new dresses from a particular costume-maker, and the second chart displays prices from a
website where dancers, parents and dressmakers are encouraged to sell used Irish step
dancing dresses.
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Chart Nine—Distribution of Prices of “Off the Peg” Pre-Made New Dresses in American
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Analysis of Distribution of Prices of “Off the Peg” Pre-Made New Dresses in American
The company “Dancing in Celtic” sells new dresses that are in the mid-range of
Irish step dancing dress prices. The dress prices seem to be representative of an average
expense for a new costume. Dancing in Celtic offers dresses in two rough price
categories. One type of dress retails for approximately US $1100-1400, and another
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Chart Ten— Distribution of Dress Prices as Listed on Dance-again.com, April 23, 2007
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Analysis of Distribution of Dress Prices as Listed on Dance-again.com, April 23, 2007
One way by which some dancers try to find lower prices for dancing costumes is
to find a manufacturer who charges less money. However, many dancers purchase used
prominent sites for the resale of Irish step dancing costumes. Although some new dresses
are sold on Dance-again.com, the vast majority of the dresses have previously been worn,
although the age of the dresses varies considerably. This chart displays the prices of the
dresses sold on this website as an illustration of the prices of used dancing dresses. The
website is international in scope and features dresses being sold by participants (often
individual dancers and parents, as well as some dressmakers) from America, Canada,
Ireland, England, Scotland, Northern Ireland, Australia, New Zealand and mainland
According to data on the Dance-again.com website, typical prices for used dresses
cluster between approximately US $300 and $1300. The most common hundred-dollar
interval is a price between $701 and $800. However, the data shows a strong tail towards
There is very little information available about the demographics of Irish step
dancers. Few scholars of Irish step dancing have even mentioned the possible
implications of class analysis for the understanding of Irish step dancing. For the purpose
of this discussion, the term “class” refers to a variety of factors including access to
material resources and monetary wealth. The use of the term assumes that there are social
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stratifications with regards to these factors, and that these stratifications can cause
One of the few who have commented on any sort of relation between class and
Irish step dancing is Jessica Tomell-Presto. In her dissertation, Tomell-Presto states that
participants in American Irish step dancing “are predominantly white Americans. The
amount of technology that accompanies these families, the cell phones, pagers, walkie
talkies, in addition to the amount spent on costuming the dancers, would indicate that
these are predominantly middle-class Americans” (76). While this assessment may be
adroit, it is not based upon sufficient data—many people, from working class people to
economic elites, have access to cell phones and pagers. Many other factors, from solid
earnings data, to more context specific evidence such as access to education, social
aims to make a more accurate assessment of the class status of any population of Irish
step dancers. Such an analysis is beyond the scope of this thesis. However, it does not
seem prudent to exclude any discussion of class from an analysis of Irish step dancing
costumes simply because this data have not been offered by scholars. In the absence of
demographic figures to describe Irish step dancing populations, there does exist a
discourse on the potential class ramifications of Irish step dancing costume prices. The
monetary cost of Irish step dancing costumes has been a contentious topic in the Irish
The frustration of some parents and dancers in the face of what might be
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through such documented forums as internet messageboards and letters to the editor of
Irish step dancing magazines. Some dancing teachers and adjudicators worry about the
impacts of these costs on Irish step dancing culture. For example, in a September 2003
Frank Whelan, author of The Complete Guide to Irish Dance, suggests that the expense
of participating in Irish step dancing has increased so much that “some dancers have to
retire from competition dancing as they cannot afford to keep up with the latest dance
Gaelacha), was quoted in an article in the July 2001 International Irish Dancing
We also think the scene has become far too costly, especially the dresses,
and there's too much focus on appearance, and not enough on the actual
dancing. Some of the children today look like walking Christmas trees!
We think it's unfair that good dancers are unable to compete because they
can't afford to buy an £800 dress (33).
Costume producers, such as Gavin Doherty, T.C.R.G., respond that they have few means
of reducing their prices, because Irish step dancing dresses in their current incarnations
are very difficult to make, require specific machinery, and are made of costly fabrics.
Furthermore, many Irish step dancing dresses are made in areas of the world (such as
Ireland, England, Australia, and the United States), where minimum wages for workers
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are higher than they are in third world areas—where much of conventional clothing is
made. In a September 2005 Irish Dancing and Culture International article entitled,
“From Dancer to Designer,” Doherty is quoted as saying, “People think I'm making a
fortune, but I'm not. They forget that fabric alone costs about £500, then you have
overheads and wages to pay out of that, so I'm not rolling it in!” (45). There is not enough
evidence available to state whether or not the cost of Irish step dancing dresses has made
Irish step dancing a more economically exclusive practice. What can be said, however, is
that there is a perception among some in the Irish step dancing community that the
relatively high price of dresses may have negative consequences on the level of economic
Regardless of these possible effects, however, some parents take pride in their
ability to provide such elaborate and expensive garments to their daughters. In a June
2005 letter to the editor of Irish Dancing and Culture International, one mother from
Dublin argued:
When is the moaning going to stop regarding dresses? We buy and have
them made because we adore our children. It gives us a great deal of
pleasure to see them dancing - it's called pride. I've seen mums go without
food to give their children the best - and why not? It's a beautiful hobby
(11).
Perhaps it is not wrong to allow children to have access to beautiful things, such as Irish
step dancing dresses. However, when these things are so expensive, some parents have a
much higher ability to give (and, it is implied, express their “pride” in their children) than
do others. The high cost of Irish step dancing dresses is also problematic because it is
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assumed by many dancers who one must have a fashionable solo dress to be able to place
well in competition.
decoding, which presupposes practical or explicit mastery of a cipher or code” (1984: 2).
The ways that people consume goods and services are important parts of their
interactions with the social world. Through acts of consuming and conceiving of
products, people encounter and create meanings, codes and information. Some of these
meanings relate to conceptions of self and identity. In a related vein, in The Overspent
American: Upscaling, Downshifting, and the New Consumer, Juliet Schor argues that,
“personal identity does not exist prior to the social world, it comes into being with it”
(59). One of the ways in which people create social meanings is through the purchase and
Shopping Experience, Pasi Falk and Colin Campbell suggest that consumers can engage
shoppers, constructing and changing themselves and their experiences “either to accord
with others’ expectations, or to distinguish [themselves] from others, or possibly just for
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fun” (7). This type of analysis posits consumers as active agents who have the ability to
modify their personas and, perhaps, defy their personal limitations through interactions
with products.
fashion and dress may be viewed both as means of constructing and reproducing societal
norms and standards, and contesting those norms. Barnard defines “reproduction” as a
process “in which elements of culture (practices, products, institutions, ideas, beliefs and
status) are sustained, [and] the ways in which the continued existence of these things is
clarifies his use of the term “reproduction,” defining it somewhere between mechanical
that “what people wear constructs and maintains identities;” such as those related to class,
gender, and ethnicity (7). Barnard contrasts the concept of fashion as reproduction with
that of fashion being used as “resistance, opposition and struggle” (129). He elaborates
on some of the forms this resistance can take, describing his concepts of “refusal and
reversal.” He states, “refusal is the attempt to step outside of the offending structures and
reversal is the attempt to reverse the positions of power and privilege that operate within
those structures” (129). Examples he cites of resistant dress practices include the wearing
of hip hop clothing, punk clothing, jeans, trousers worn by women, and the
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constructs of Irishness offered by previous costumes in that the silhouette has remained
fairly consistent, as has the amount of bodily flesh that is covered by the costume.
Contemporary Irish step dancing costumes also contest previous images through changes
in their design. However, it would be a stretch to say that the changes that have been
made to Irish step dancing costumes constitute a “refusal” of previous trends, because the
changes have not been accompanied by any sort of ethos that opposes previous styles.
Commodified Irishnesses
In her 2000 book, Shopping for Identity: The Marketing of Ethnicity, Marilyn
Halter examines shifts in marketing in the United States that tend toward the catering of
economies to meet the needs of “ethnic” and minority consumers within America. Halter
describes the ways in which markets have shaped discourse related to nationalism,
immigration, assimilation, and ethnicity. In addition, she looks at the ways in which
ideologies towards ethnicity have been altered, both within the broader public sphere and
by the actions of marketers. In particular, Halter traces the recent use of ethnicity in
marketing, with use of messages sometimes stripped of their overt political content in
favor of messages palatable to a broader audience. She notes that this is in response to
broader diversity in the United States, as well as wider acceptance of diversity and civil
rights appeals, but also to White counter-claims of genuine ethnicity, which may seek to
refute civil rights gains. She also discusses the ways in which recent attempts to
increased immigration and diversity have changed the ways marketers have approached
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Halter examines these topics through a variety of lenses, paying attention to a
wide array of American identities, including Puerto Rican, Irish, Mexican or Chicano,
Jewish and African-American ethnicities. She asserts that both consumers and marketers
have created changes in the social construction of ideas of ethnicity through commercial
practices. Thus, patterns and messages of marketing and consuming, Halter argues, not
only are affected by broader social changes in perception of race and ethnicity, but,
rather, are constitutive of those changes. Halter states, “Ethnicity is increasingly manifest
through self-conscious consumption of goods and services and, at the same time, these
Halter, Irishness was notably marketed to mass American markets in the 1990s, and the
consumption of various forms of Irish culture (such as stage shows and music) can be
2006 edited book, The Irish in Us: Irishness, Performativity, and Popular Culture. Negra
suggests that, in the past ten years, Irishness “has become a form of discursive currency”
that has been “globally marketed,” and especially marketed to white America, through
“heritage narratives” (1). Negra describes a variety of products that have been marked
Ireland felt intensified pressure to engage in what the author refers to as the discursive
consumption” (9). The meanings of these forms of “theme-parked” Ireland have changed
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as social conditions in Ireland have altered. According to Negra, where once Ireland was
marketed by its green hills and rural folk, “Irishness now factors in campaigns for
eroticism” (6). Negra argues that there is no one “‘truthful’ version of Irishness” or of any
other aspect of “society.” In looking at the multitudes of Irish cultures and Irishnesses,
Negra seeks to interrogate “the many fictions that proliferate around Irish identity in our
current environment” (2). These fictions are constructed through a variety of means,
including through social practices such as dance and performance, and also through
Best Kept Secret in Retail’: Selling Irishness in Contemporary America,” Irishness has
been marketed in a variety of ways as Ireland’s economy has moved from a period of
“stagnation” to the “economically successful Celtic Tiger Ireland” of the present (89).
Casey details the ways in which the Irish government has supported a variety of
identity of the culture to the global consuming public. These campaigns, as well as others
originating in the Republic and carried out by American marketers and businesses
tapping into the phenomenon, have been quite successful. According to Casey, one of
“the fastest-growing industries in the United States has been Irish-themed shopping” (84).
For example, according to Casey, “…between 1989 and 1999 Irish ethnic stores in the
United States grew by 43 percent” (88). Casey suggests that when Americans consume
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America. She writes, “themes of Irishness in the United States have become profitable
marketing strategies and distinctive consumption practices shaping new identities and
social formations” (84). Casey notes that the Irish-American identities bought and sold
vary widely from consumer to consumer, as well as from product to product. Similarly,
when Irish dancers purchase products associated with Irish dancing culture as a part of
their participation in Irish dancing, they invest meaning into their purchases, and
them.
couture—resemble transitions in the Irish economy during the Celtic Tiger boom. Irish
economic policy up to the 1960s was remarkably insular, but by the decade of the 1990s,
the Irish economy was heavily dependent upon foreign investment. The increasing cost of
dancing costumes may also be perceived as mirroring growth in Irish incomes. Ireland’s
appears to have increased during the Celtic Tiger period, even as poverty declined as a
whole. Similarly, some Irish step dancers have been concerned with the social
implications of the high costs of Irish step dancing dresses. However, many members of
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both Irish publics and Irish step dancing communities have responded approvingly to
overall changes in the Irish economy and Irish step dancing, respectively.
Wendy Parkins argues that “forms or items of dress—from the ceremonial to the
everyday—can themselves become sites of political struggle, how they can be used
variously to contest or legitimate the power of the state and the meanings of citizenship”
in her 2002 book, Fashioning the Body Politic: Dress, Gender, Citizenship (2). Parkins
describes dress as a discourse that at times has both directly represented and constructed
meanings associated with the states and state interests, as well as expressed and
It could perhaps be argued that the designs of Irish step dancing dresses portray a
economy or nation state. This depiction of Irishness, although still asserting itself as
images from the Book of Kells to make its impact. Rather, the design of most
contemporary Irish step dancing dresses uses abstract patterns. Instead of being based in
the somber tonalities of black velvet, or the quaintness of crochet lace, contemporary
Irish step dancing dresses offer bright colors, shining fabrics, and glittering appliqué.
Irish step dancing dresses may, in some ways, be an expression of some of the joys of the
increasingly secular state, Irish economic success, or of the popularity of Irish step
dancing as a practice.
However, it can also be argued that Irish step dancing dresses are part of a culture
that encourages cutthroat competition, and competition through expenditure. Some critics
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of the Celtic Tiger economy and the modern Irish nation state might conversely suggest
that dancing dresses are an expression of an Ireland that is more motivated by capitalism
Irish step dancing dresses have, in the 1990s and 2000s, become increasingly
commodified. Over the same period, the price of dancing dresses also became
significantly higher. Increasing Irish step dancing prices have caused concern among
certain practitioners of Irish step dancing, some of whom suggest that Irish step dancing
may be becoming less accessible to poorer sections of the public. These concerns seem
Ireland.
Competitive Irish step dancing dress styles changed significantly through the late
twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. In addition, Irish dancing dresses moved from
being products of an informal economy, more or less, to being more clearly situated as
nature has implications for the ways in which these dancing dresses can be interpreted.
One way of looking at the commodification of dancing dresses is to look at whether it has
made the practice more or less accessible to participants. One possible effect of the way
exclusivity.
Irish dancing dresses can also perhaps be viewed as representations of the new
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and barriers to access. In the 1990s, scholars such as Halter and Negra suggest, both
ethnicity and Irishness were increasingly sold to American and world markets. It can
perhaps be argued that Irish step dancing dresses are another form of “commodified
Irishness.” Commodities that represent and market different forms of ethnicities can
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ENDNOTES
1 The popularity of wigs led to a number of “wig mishaps” in which the wig would fly
off of the head during competitions and performances. Dancer “Kellith” recalled such an
incident, writing, “I had one of those old bun wigs that's like a scrunchie and it fell off so
everyone was just kicking it to the back of the room. I still get laughed at for that one!” in
Kellith, "re: Funniest thing that has happened while you have been performing?"
Dance.net, 27 Dec 2005. 23 Feb 2008. <http://www.dance.net/topic/4458007/1/Irish-
Shows/Funniest-thing-that-has-happened-while-you-have-been-performing.html>.
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