Muffler

Muffler
 Scarves - gallicism indicating literally "hiding place for the nose" or "hide your nose." So called scarf or neckerchief, which covers the neck and lower face in wet windy and cold weather. It don and aesthetic reasons, to supplement or create a certain image, to emphasize the combination of colors in a particular ...
 Scarves - gallicism indicating literally "hiding place for the nose" or "hide your nose." So called scarf or neckerchief, which covers the neck and lower face in wet windy and cold weather. It don and aesthetic reasons, to supplement or create a certain image, to emphasize the combination of colors in a particular dress. Scarves come in male and female, as they are worn under outer clothing, and on top of it.

Men's scarves narrow cut when equipped usually develops in half lengthwise; it made of silk or other similar fabrics and worn instead of a scarf or tie. It appeared at the end of the XVIII century in France, thanks to the young dandy who tried to express the unusual shape muffler protest against the Jacobin terror and petty bourgeois philistine tastes of the province. In XVIII-XIX centuries scarf was made of patterned fabrics, usually silk. In the Russian Empire of the time to Goldfinch, wearing a scarf, treated with suspicion and perceived this as a sign of a headdress of rebellion, dissent. This is partly explained by the fact that he liked to wear street hooligans and criminals. Plaid wool scarf in vogue until the end of the XIX century, after which they began to wear and ladies in cold weather.