Bodice and skirt Place of origin: Great Britain, UK - TopicsExpress



          

Bodice and skirt Place of origin: Great Britain, UK (made) Date: 1862 (made) Artist/Maker: Unknown (production) Materials and Techniques: Jaquard-woven silk trimmed with satin, lined with glazed cotton, boned and brass Credit Line: Given by Miss I. Bowhill McClure Museum number: T.2&A-1984 A voluminous skirt billows out from the fitted bodice of this outfit, creating an expanse of intense blue punctuated by woven stripes. Both natural and synthetic dyes were used to generate the dazzling hues that became particularly fashionable in Britain during the 1850s and 1860s. The streets and drawing rooms must have been awash with colour. Bright blue was a popular colour, and silk a stylish choice for dress fabric as it took the dye very well, producing an intense glossy sheen. Not everyone approved of these striking shades and the French historian Hippolyte Taine (1828-1893) found womens dress loud and overcharged with ornament when he visited England in the 1860s. He thought that the colours were outrageously crude…each swearing at the others and cited violate dresses, of a really ferocious violet; purple or poppy red silks, grass green dresses and azure blue scarves as particularly offensive to the eye. Isobella Bowhill (1840-1920), the donors grandmother, is said to have worn this dress to the International Exhibition of 1862 in London. Victoria & Albert Museum - See more at: theebonswan.blogspot/2015/01/dress-bodice-and-skirt-ca-1862.html#sthash.GopqlpxR.dpuf Pin it here: pinterest/pin/269230883950266745/ And here: pinterest/pin/269230883950266747/
Posted on: Thu, 15 Jan 2015 00:00:29 +0000

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