Houndstooth (pronounced houns-tuth)
(1) A
two-colour fabric pattern of broken checks (multi-color versions using the
pattern do now exist and are also so-described).
(2) Fabric
with a houndstooth pattern; an item of clothing made with such fabric.
(3) In
botany, as Cynoglossum officinale (houndstongue, houndstooth, dog's tongue,
gypsy flower (and “rats and mice” due to its smell), a herbaceous plant of the
family Boraginaceae.
1936: A
word, based on the appearance of the design, the pattern (in architecture,
decorative art, fabric etc) is ancient but the descriptive term “houndstooth”
has been in use only since 1936. The
shape is sometimes referred to as dogstooth (or dog's tooth) and in French it’s
the more pleasing pied-de-poule
(chicken feet), preferred also by the Italians.
In 1936 there must have been pedants who insisted it should have been “hound's
tooth” because that does appear in some advertisements but in commercial use,
houndstooth quickly was standardized. The
name was chosen a reference directly to a dog’s tooth, not the pattern of teeth
marks left by its bite. The construct
was hounds + tooth. Hound was from the Middle
English hound, from the Old English hund, from the Proto-West Germanic hund, from the Proto-Germanic hundaz and was congnate with the West
Frisian hûn, the Dutch hond, the Luxembourgish Hond, the German Hund, the German Low German Hund,
the Danish hund, the Faroese hundur, the Icelandic hundur, the Norwegian Bokmål hund, the Norwegian Nynorsk hund and the Swedish hund, from the pre-Germanic ḱuntós
(which may be compared
with the Latvian sùnt-ene (big dog), an
enlargement of the primitive Indo-European ḱwṓ (dog). Elsewhere, the forms included the Old Irish cú (dog), the Tocharian B ku, the Lithuanian šuõ, the Armenian շուն (šun), and the Russian сука (suka)).
In England,
as late as the fourteenth century, “hound” remained the word in general use to
describe most domestic canines while “dog” was used of a sub-type resembling
the modern mastiff and bulldog. By the
sixteenth century, dog had displaced hound as the general word descriptor. The
latter coming to be restricted to breeds used for hunting and in the same era,
the word dog was adopted by several continental European languages as their
word for mastiff. Dog was from the
Middle English dogge (source also of
the Scots dug (dog)), from the Old
English dogga & docga of uncertain origin. Interestingly, the original sense appears to
have been of a “common dog” (as opposed one well-bred), much as “cur” was later
used and there’s evidence it was applied especially to stocky dogs of an
unpleasing appearance. Etymologists have
pondered the origin: It may have been a
pet-form diminutive with the suffix -ga
(the similar models being compare frocga
(frog) & picga (pig), appended to
a base dog-, or doc-(the origin and meaning of these unclear). Another
possibility is Old English dox (dark,
swarthy) (a la frocga from frog)
while some have suggested a link to the Proto-West Germanic dugan (to be suitable), the origin of
Old English dugan (to be good,
worthy, useful), the English dow and
the German taugen; the theory is
based on the idea that it could have been a child’s epithet for dogs, used in
the sense of “a good or helpful animal”.
Few support that and more are persuaded there may be some relationship
with docce (stock, muscle), from the
Proto-West Germanic dokkā (round
mass, ball, muscle, doll), from which English gained dock (stumpy tail). In fourteenth century England, hound (from
the Old English hund) was the general
word applied to all domestic canines while dog referred to some sub-types
(typically those close in appearance to the modern mastiff and bulldog. In German, the form endures as der Hund (the dog) & die Hunde (the dogs) and the houndstooth
pattern is Hahnentritt. Houndstooth is a noun; the noun plural is
houndsteeth. Strictly speaking, it may
be that certain use of the plural (such as several houndstooth jackets) should
be called “houndstooths” but this is
an ugly word which should be avoided and no sources seem to list it as
standard. The same practice seems to
have been adopted for handing the plural of cars called “Statesman”, “statesmen”
seeming just an absurdity.
Although the classic black & white remains the industry staple, designer colors are now not uncommon.
In modern use in English, a “hound” seems to be thought of as a certain sort of dog, usually large, with a finely honed sense of smell and used (often in packs) for hunting and the sense development may also have been influenced by the novel The Hound of the Baskervilles (1901-1902) by the physician Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1859–1930). The best regarded of Conan Doyle’s four novels, it’s set in the gloomy fog of Dartmoor in England’s West Country and is the tale of the search for a “fearsome, diabolical hound of supernatural origin”. The author's name is an example of how conventions of use influence things. He's long been referred to as “Sir Arthur Conan Doyle” or “Conan Doyle” which would imply the surname “Conan Doyle” but his surname was “Doyle” and he was baptized with the Christian names “Arthur Ignatius Conan”, the “Conan” from his godfather. Some academic and literary libraries do list him as “Doyle” but he's now referred to almost universally as “Conan Doyle” and the name “Arthur Doyle” would be as un-associated with him as “George Shaw” would with George Bernard Shaw (GBS; 1856-1950). Tooth (a hard, calcareous structure present in the mouth of many vertebrate animals, generally used for biting and chewing food) was from the Middle English tothe, toth & tooth, from the Old English tōþ (tooth), from the Proto-West Germanic tanþ, from the Proto-Germanic tanþs (tooth), from the primitive Indo-European h₃dónts (tooth) and related to tusk.
Lindsay Lohan in monochrome check jacket, Dorchester Hotel, London, June 2017 (left), Lindsay Lohan in L.A.M.B. Lambstooth Sweater, Los Angeles, April 2005 (centre) and racing driver Sir Lewis Hamilton (b 1985) in a Burberry Houndstooth ensemble, Annual FIA Prize Giving Ceremony, Baku, Azerbaijan, December 2023 (right). The Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (the FIA; the International Automobile Federation) is world sport's dopiest regulatory body. Although, at a distance, a wide range of fabrics look like houndstooth, some are really simple symmetrical, monochrome checks without the distinctive pattern and where designers have varied the shape, other descriptors (and L.A.M.B. couldn’t resist “lambstooth”) are used, something which helps also with product differentiation. Sir Lewis though, sticks to the classics. Regarded as the most fashion conscious of the Formula One drivers of his generation, it’s clear that assiduously he studies Lohanic fashion directions.
Designers
consider houndstooth part of the plaid “family”, the jagged contours of the
shape the point of differentiation from most which tend towards uniform,
straight lines. Although for the archaeological
record its clear the concept of the design has an ancient lineage, what’s now
thought of as the “classic” black & white houndstooth was defined in the
mid-nineteenth century when it began to be produced at scale in the Scottish
lowlands, in parallel with the plaid most associated with the culture, the
tartan (although in some aspects the “history & cultural traditions” of
tartan were a bit of a commercial construct).
Technically, a houndstooth is a two tone (the term monochrome often used
in the industry to convey the idea of “black & white” (a la photography) rather than being
etymologically accurate) plaid in four bands, two of each color (in both the
weft & warp weave), woven with the simple 2:2 twill. One of the charms of the design is that with
slight variations in size and scale, different effects can be achieved and
color mixes are now not uncommon although the classic black & white remains
the industry staple.
1969 Holden Monaro GTS 350 (left), 1972 Holden Monaro GTS 308 (centre) and 1977 Chrysler Cordoba (right). Despite the popular perception, not all the “personal luxury” Chryslers of the era and not even all the Cordobas (1975-1983) were finished in “Fine Corinthian Leather”.
For
passenger car interiors, houndstooth (rendered usually with a synthetic material) enjoyed a late mid-century spate of
popularity, used for what were called generically “cloth inserts” and the use of
houndstooth trended towards vehicles marketed as “sporty” whereas for luxury
cars plusher fabrics like velour were preferred. The cloth inserts seem only ever to have been
paired with vinyl and not used with leather.
The history
in the Lowlands is murky but it seems certain the early fabrics were woven from wool which
makes sense given the importance of sheep to the economy and the early garments
were utilitarian, often cloak-like outer garments for those tending the flocks. The early term was “shepherd’s check” which
became first “dogstooth” and then “houndstooth”, canine teeth something with
which shepherds would have been familiar because of the threat to their animals
from the predations of wild dogs. Fabric
with smaller checks could be called “puppycheck”. Interestingly, despite its striking
appearance, the houndstooth pattern remained a generic and was never adopted as
a family or clan symbol, a la the tartans.
It gained a new popularity in the 1930s when photographs began to appear
of members of the British royal family and various gentry wearing houndstooth
jackets while hunting or riding, thus the association with wealth and privilege
which so appealed to the middle class who started wearing them too. By the time designers began to put them on
the catwalks, houndstooth’s future was assured.
Houndstooth has received the imprimatur of more than one Princess of Wales: Catherine, Princess of Wales (b 1982, left) and Diana, Princess of Wales (1961-1997, right) in a typically daring color mix.
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