A Maid's Right Hand Shaped Every Shirt Made Since

3 min read

Imagine you're at a clothing store that stocks items for the whole family. You pick up a white buttoned shirt to try on. The style is pretty plain. Was it designed to be worn by a woman or man?

There may be a clue: Many women's shirts have buttons on the left side, while men's shirts usually button on the right. Even zippers in pants and jackets sometimes follow the same pattern.

But why does clothing fasten differently depending on whether it's made for men or women? The answer has a lot to do with tradition, history and the way clothes were made long ago. Even small details, like a zipper, can tell a story about the past.

Clothing Is Full of Hidden History

When people look at clothes today, they often think about colors, comfort or style. But clothing is also part of what historians call material culture: all the objects people use every day. Examining the material culture of the past can reveal how people lived, worked and thought in earlier times.

Fasteners like buttons and zippers aren't just practical. They also follow design traditions that became connected to gender over hundreds of years.

One of the most common explanations for why male and female garments have their buttons on opposite sides comes from European fashion history. A long time ago, wealthy women from the nobility often wore complicated dresses with buttons and fasteners — so complicated that they needed help getting dressed.

About 90% of people are right-handed. When a maid stood directly facing a noblewoman to dress her, buttons on the wearer's left side were lined up perfectly for the maid to use her dominant right hand to fit them into the buttonholes. If you try buttoning a jacket onto a friend while facing them, you will see exactly why this layout made the maid's job so much easier.

Men, on the other hand, usually dressed themselves. So shirts, trousers and uniforms were designed with fastenings that were easy for the wearer to manage himself — meaning buttons on the right side for a right-handed person to fasten.

Some historians also point to military traditions as a possible influence. Men often wore swords on their left side and drew them with their right hand. The direction jackets and shirts closed up may have helped prevent fabric from getting caught in the way.

Fashion Habits Are Hard to Change

Once clothing started being made in factories in the early 19th century, brands needed consistent designs. Factories work best when patterns are standardized — so the button traditions stayed in place, even when people forgot how they started.

As zippers gained popularity in the early 1900s, clothing companies stuck with the same customs. Instead of creating brand-new rules, many manufacturers simply kept the same patterns they had used for buttons. So zippers often ended up following the same "direction" as older garment closures.

Today, more brands are making clothing designed to be worn by anyone, and many designers no longer follow the old left-side/right-side rule. It's just a fashion tradition — there's no reason zippers and buttons need to go on different sides.

If you make your own clothes, you can put closures — whether buttons, zippers, snaps, ties, Velcro or even something new you invent yourself — wherever you want!