.. where the first thing that made the change between early Victorian and Mid-Victorian was the sewing machine. The concept had been around for many years, but the ability to use a model for every day women or “light” sewing in industry had eluded inventors. In 1755 German Charles Weisenthal …
Fashion History Blog
Can you date the people in this Thanksgiving portrait?
Based on the clothing, furnishings, tools, and MOSTLY the song title – we place this at about 1918. OK, so it’s just that the song was wildly popular in 1918, and we know little boys wore sailor suits at that age at that time. The woman’s ensemble could be from …
Happy Thanksgiving!
This authentic 1915 postcard exactly expresses our wishes to you around the world on this American holiday. We are thankful for you, our customers, our audiences, The Gals who give so much from their hearts, and all who keep history alive through their research, documentation, and presentation by teaching others. …
The first thing that moved Early into Mid Victorian…
… was the invention of the light weight, home use sewing machine. In 1851, Singer had taken the heavy industrial, stand up models that the textile industry was using, and made it gentle and delicate enough for use by the general consumer (as opposed to factory workers). Putting little stores …
Mid-Victorian Fashion according to historians started..
… in 1860 and lasted until 1880. There were four significant changes and factors they say made a distinct “line in the fashion sand” between the end of the ’50’s and the start of the ’60’s. These affected the silhouette, construction, design, and presentation of women’s clothing. (1865 to 1900 …
Which eases us without fuss into the next…
… Mid-Victorian era. It is difficult to establish where one starts and one stops – an actual dilemma with fashion history as a whole. Just like us today, women wore their favorite out-dated fashions long after new ones were introduced. It might take a long time for women to learn …
High fashion designer Charles Worth…
… an Englishman who established a fashion house in Paris in the mid-1850’s, and was the key creator of the many types of sleeves we will discuss through the entire Victorian era. His son would continue creative designs into the 20th century. Worth was a favorite of the French empresses …
Some Victorian women would do anything…
.. to get the look of the egageante huge sleeve. In this, what might be set up as a joke between photographic shots, an early Victorian woman uses umbrellas instead of fabric to create the giant look of the sleeve of the day.
Royalty around the world wore the sleeve…
… so functional, comfortable, cheap, and making women look huge. (Photo: Princess Maria of Prussia wears engageante sleeves in this casual portrait. By the 1860’s, portraiture was more comfortable for people, but it was still mostly the wealthy, elite, and royal who could afford it. Beatrice, Queen Victoria’s daughter, had …
Victorian huge sleeves of course were…
… introduced by Queen Victoria to the public, although they had been worn in the 18th century. They were not a Victorian innovation. American women had long ago figured out the advantage of wearing a washable cap, sleeve, and outer petticoat in the way today’s women would wear aprons to …