A Small Detail with a Big Message
Fashion is becoming more fluid. What once defined men’s or women’s clothing now often overlaps. Yet, one small detail still separates the two: the button placement on shirts. And surprisingly, it ties back to centuries-old traditions rooted in gender inequality.
Look Closely: Left vs. Right
Next time you button a shirt, notice where the buttons are. On women’s shirts, they usually sit on the left. On men’s shirts, they’re on the right. This tiny difference often goes unnoticed—but it’s far from random.
The Maid’s Advantage
One popular theory dates back to the 13th century, when buttons first appeared and were expensive. Wealthy women didn’t dress themselves; maids did. Since most maids were right-handed, buttons on the left made dressing easier.
Melanie M. Moore, founder of a womenswear brand, explained:
“Wealthy women had maids. Placing buttons on the left made it easier for someone standing in front of you to fasten them.”
Men, on the other hand, typically dressed themselves—so buttons on the right made more sense for right-handed wearers.
Battle-Ready Clothing
Other experts trace this fashion choice to the battlefield.
Men often carried weapons. Buttons on the right allowed them to unbutton jackets quickly while keeping their dominant hand free.
Fashion historian Chloe Chapin said:
“Many elements of men’s fashion have military roots. Access to a weapon practically trumped everything.”
Women’s clothing, of course, had no need for such battle-readiness—so left-side buttons stayed.
Masculine Fashion in Disguise
By the 1880s, women’s styles borrowed more masculine looks. But laws in many places banned women from dressing like men.
According to Chapin,
“The button difference might have helped confirm the wearer was still in women’s clothing.”
A Symbol of Inequality?
In 1894, British sexologist Havelock Ellis offered a harsher theory.
He claimed that women’s right-to-left buttons reflected the belief that they had weaker motor skills and needed help dressing. Men, seen as stronger and more capable, didn’t need assistance—hence the opposite placement.
The “Button Differential”
Though subtle, this so-called “button differential” has lingered for centuries.
As The Atlantic wrote, it’s
“a relic of an old tradition that we’ve ported, rather unthinkingly, into the contemporary world.”
Social Media Reacts
Online users are just discovering the button divide:
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“I was today years old when I learned that women’s shirts have buttons on the left!”
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“Just found out shirts button differently for men and women. Wtf!!!”
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“Zippers too, usually!” someone adds.
And one Twitter user summed it up:
“Ah yes, the great gender divide—centuries ago women needed help dressing, and we’re still buttoning up outdated traditions.”
Breaking the Pattern
A few brands are now challenging the button norm. But most still follow the traditional left-for-women, right-for-men standard.
Did you know about this button tradition?
Share your thoughts—and pass this article along to spark some eye-opening conversations!