For those of you in need of a new wardrobe for the campaign season, we currently have listed on Ebay three of our earliest 18th century creations.
The first is Ashley's first "Costume Close-up jacket," the first completely hand-sewn jacket I ever made, and the first project I created using a scaled-up pattern from an original garment. For more on the jacket's fabric and construction details, check out its previous Threaded Bliss posts here and here. Clicking on the image below will bring you to the current Ebay listing, which includes condition and measurement details.
The second item on offer is Ashley's sea green fitted-back gown. Like the jacket, this garment, too, represents multiple firsts for us. This was the first gown I'd sewn completely by hand, and this was the first petticoat Ashley ever completed by hand. This is also the first gown I draped from start to finish. I'd purchased the fabric on sale, and Ashley fell in love with the color and wanted it, so I decided it was time for an experiment. I started pinning and folding and cutting and pleating and trimming, and taught myself to drape in the process, and she ended up with this gown, which remained her favorite for years. The original post on it can be found here, and the picture below will link you to the Ebay listing. Measurements and condition details can be found there.
The third item is another gown, the first I ever made completely by hand for myself. It's made of a beautiful medium-weight dark indigo wool that has a lovely heavy drape to it that helps give the gown an ideal period shape. I wore this gown only once (to what was probably the hottest reenactment we've ever been to) and realized only long after the fact that I never even got a picture of myself wearing it, which is why it never got its own Threaded Bliss treatment. Ah well, that makes it perfect to pass on to someone else, who will be able at long last to give it an identity. :-) The listing is linked through the picture below.
If you'd like any additional details or pictures of any of these items, please let us know and we'll be happy to share them. We very much hope these will go to good homes and be used and loved for many years to come!
Showing posts with label sea green gown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sea green gown. Show all posts
Friday, April 25, 2014
Saturday, October 2, 2010
Threaded Bliss
A Sea-Green English Back Gown (Robe a l'Anglaise), 1770-1775
Thomas Jefferson at Merchants Square, Williamsburg
This is one of my favorite efforts. Of course, that’s partially (largely!) due to the fact that Mark Hutter, the tailor at CW, gave the entire ensemble, from the gown cut and draping to the fabric choice, a thumbs up for accuracy after close inspection when Ashley wore it in there one afternoon back in July. The only mistake I made (which he pointed out, and which I had noticed as soon as she got dressed that morning), was that I had made the waist ever-so-slightly too long. This is the result of finishing it at 2 in the morning in the hotel room, without getting her to try it on over all the period underthings, so I wasn’t too surprised. Thankfully it’s an easy fix, though, which I’ll get around to…one of these days!
The pattern: Draped by me. The sleeve shape is taken from the Janet Arnold polonaise pattern on pg. 39 of Patterns of Fashion 1.
The back of the gown, taken in front of the
Jonathan Trumbull, Jr. House in Lebanon, CT
Construction details: This gown is entirely hand-sewn using period construction techniques. First, I draped the back into "en fourreau" pleats, which extend from the shoulders down through the length of the skirt, and top-stitched the pleats to the back bodice lining.
Detail of the back en fourreau pleats
Then I fitted the front/side bodice pieces, turned the edges under, and top-stitched them down as a lapped seam to the back piece; the front/side lining pieces were then inserted in a similar way and whipstitched into place on the inside.
Interior of the bodice, showing the linen lining whipstitched into place
The neckline and front edges of the bodice were then turned in towards each other and finished using “le point a rabattre sous la main,” which both finishes the edges and secures the lining to the fashion fabric at the same time.
Detail of box-pleated trim around the neckline
Detail of box-pleated trim around sleeve end
To give it some weight and make the hem more aesthetically pleasing when it is worn a la polonaise, the bottom 9” of the gown skirt is lined with cream china silk. The bodice closes in front with straight pins.
The inside of the gown, showing the linen bodice lining,
the cotton tape ties used to polonaise the skirts,
and the china silk hem facing
The fabric: The gown was made using a light-weight sea green cotton. The color is appropriate for a cotton or silk textile of the period, since these fibers took to certain colored dyes more easily than either wool or linen.
Finishing the look: The gown and petticoat are made to be worn over a small oval hoop like the one below, reproduced by the CW CDC, based on one in the collection of Colonial Williamsburg.
Small hoops, reproduced by the CW CDC. The original is in the CW collection.
The outer garments are worn over a white linen shift, fully boned stays, the hoop, and two linen petticoats to give the skirts more volume and prevent the ridges from the hoops from showing through. A white cotton lawn handkerchief is worn to fill in the low, wide neckline. To complete an upper-middling class look, Ashley wears this accessorized with pearl drop earrings by Janice Erickson Smith of Historic Delights and a triple-strand necklace Ashley made of tiny round pearls, knotted on silk thread and tied with a silk ribbon.
In front of the Jonathan Trumbull, Jr. House in Lebanon, CT
Under the Redcoat 2010, Williamsburg
Under the Redcoat 2010, Williamsburg
The front bedchamber of the Jonathan Trumbull, Jr. House, Lebanon, CT
Labels:
18th century fashion,
sea green gown,
Threaded Bliss
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)