Flying
Human flight has existed since the late nineteenth century to the early twentieth. However, it remains contested who actually created the first successful airplane, the accessories and costuming that have developed around the activity of flying include a wide variety of disciplines and functions. Representative flight, visibility on passenger planes, escape, evasion, grips, and gear for skydiving all play a role in flying, whether it is by blimp, plane, or a skydive.
Silk Jacket
Date: 1920-1929
Medium: Silk
Donor: Elizabeth Schmeck Brown
Description: Long sleeve silk jacket with orange and black metropolis art deco print. Prominent in the center back of the jacket is an orange Zeppelin in flight over the city. A Zeppelin is a type of rigid airship named after the German inventor Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin who pioneered rigid airship development at the beginning of the 20th century.


Pan Am Flight Attendant Uniform
Date: 1964
Medium: Wool Suit Ensemble
Donor: Elizabeth Schmeck Brown
Description: Flight attendants are an invaluable part of the flight crew. They wear their uniform for the same reason the pilot wears theirs, recognizable to passengers and staff, whether in the aircraft terminal or onboard the aircraft, especially in an emergency case. This two-piece, wool flight attendant suit consists of a tailored four-button jacket with princess seams and a knee-length skirt featuring a box pleat on the back. The color is a gray-blue that appears to have faded significantly, and on the jacket’s front, there can clearly be seen two holes from where a Pan Am button was once pinned. The two angular folds at the jacket’s bottom front appear to be pockets; however, closer inspection reveals them to be a design detail. This is also repeated on the cuffs. The designer of this uniform, Don Loper, was mostly known for designing pieces reminiscent of old Hollywood’s golden age; he also designed Pan Am uniforms between 1959 and 1969. This particular uniform recently reappeared in popular culture thanks to the television show Pan Am (2011-2012). As the show takes place during the 1960s, the actresses portraying flight attendants are wearing this piece's faithful adaptations.

Tights, Flight Attendant, Braniff International Airways
Date: 1965
Medium: Polyester Fabric
Image Courtesy of The Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum
Description: Braniff was an International Airway only heard of by a small percent of Latin America's metropoles and the US's biggest cities. Braniff took advantage of customer's fear towards the adaption of jet traveling and the rise of feminism in the US to make his brand visible through injections of color, high-end style, and stewardesses' objectification. Emilio Pucci designed this colorful and formal-yet casual ensemble to motivate the public to travel by Braniff Airlines. This design was the most significant effort by Braniff that helped make his brand visible, reshaped womanhood, and facilitated transitioning to JET AGE. Besides its unique colorways, this outfit alleviated the difficulties that flight attendants faced while transitioning from one region to another by employing breathable and easily washable fabrics and easy packing.
Scarf Maps of Northern Italy and Mongolia
Date: WWII 1939 - 1945
Medium: Silkscreen Print on Silk or Rayon
Credit:
Description: Escape map scarves were one of many innovative gadget inventions for the allied forces in the Second World War developed under the supervision of Christopher Clayton Hutton, who was himself a former pilot in the First World War. Known as “escape and evasion maps,” they were created specifically for pilots who would be flying over enemy warzones. Silk/rayon was an ingenious choice, the scarf could be tied around the neck and concealed so that if the pilot needed to land they would have a silent, tear, and waterproof map of the territory including occupied and free areas, roads, railway lines, crossing points, and a scale.
Worth “Pro Batting Gloves”
Date: 1975-80
Medium: Leather, velcro
Donor: Tom McDonald
Description: These black leather gloves were manufactured in Korea by Worth Sports, which began in the United States as a leather horse collar producer in 1912 when George Sharp Lannom, Jr. purchased a tannery in Tennessee. When their horse collar sales began to decline, they turned their manufacturing direction towards leather baseballs and batting gloves. Skydiver Tom McDonald purchased this pair of gloves in the late seventies as he began his skydiving career. It is important to protect the body and have control while in freefall; a pair of soft leather gloves can provide the grip and support necessary to hold onto other divers as the fall takes place to form certain formations, sometimes called randoms or blocks. These freefall formations, and the skill required to maintain them, is one primary focus of the sport.

Parachute Gear Bag & Parachutist Log
Date: 1981
Medium: Polycotton, polyester
Donor: Tom McDonald
Description: This gear bag is made of a polycotton or polyester blend and was manufactured by DAR Enterprises in California. The body is toffee-colored, accented with stitched red, orange, and yellow stripes. The interior consists of many velcros and zippered pockets ideal for a parachutist who needs to hold their materials; a logbook for recording dives and skills learned, first aid, and other necessary emergency tools. The logbook is made of leather on the cover and within it contains spaces for recording each dive, including the instructor on board, the pilot’s name, and the altitude of the specific drop.

Marana Skydiving Center Patch
Date: ca. 1980
Medium: embroidered patch
Donor: Tom McDonald
Description: This patch pre-dates the inception of the official Skydive Marana that exists today in Marana, Arizona. It was obtained before they became a commercial dropzone in 1991 when the airstrip and the landing zone was called Marana Skydiving Center. It was acquired by student Tom McDonald in 1980 when he began his skydiving career in Marana, Arizona.
GV Skydiving Goggles
Date: 2019
Medium: Elastic, polycarbonate, neoprene
Origin: China
Description: As a skydiver, It is critical to wear eye protection during and before a jump. Being able to see well and make rapid calculations about your fall will help you make the safest landing, and enjoy the beauty of the “big carpet” down below while falling and steering the body thousands of feet. These specific goggles feature shatterproof polycarbonate lenses UV400 filter for maximum UV protection, a scratch-resistant coating, great peripheral vision, double-sided anti-fog coating, and a comfortable neoprene foam padding around the eye sockets.