}
62 Reblog

3 months ago

historicalfashion:

Evening Dress (French) | IMA | ca. 1815
113 Reblog

4 months ago

historicalfashion:

French ensemble | Napoleon and the Empire of Fashion | 1804
26 Reblog

4 months ago

damesalamode:

Lady’s Museum, December 1804.
The lady on the left has a pelissed that ties with ribbons! 
16 Reblog

4 months ago

historicalfashion:

Walking dress, Ackermann’s Repository, March 1815
53 Reblog

4 months ago

historicalfashion:

historicalfashion:

Straw and Silk Bonnet, MFA Boston, 1815

Reblogging my favorite Regency posts because I’m in that type of mood!
25 Reblog

4 months ago

historicalfashion:

Walking dress, Ackermann’s Repository, June 1814
56 Reblog

4 months ago

historicalfashion:

Carriage costume, January 1817
27 Reblog

4 months ago

historicalfashion:

historicalfashion:

Costume Parisien, Costume Paré, 1804
I love the crossed ribbon ties in the back!
1924 Reblog

5 months ago

historicalfashion:


Bodice, dated between 1804–14, probably British. Constructed of silk and cotton. +

What is this? I’ve never seen a bodice so ornamented from this period! It must be mine..
209 Reblog

5 months ago

historicalfashion:

Silk Pelisse, Museum of London, c. 1823

A pelisse or pelisse-coat, a kind of women’s outer garment which could be made in everything from the lightest silk to heavy fur. It was worn over a gown but could look like a gown itself, especially when floor length like this garment. The pelisse was made for a trousseau in 1823 for the wedding of the grandmother of the donor.

The intricate decoration is made from rouleaux applied in floral shapes, and trimmed with wire wrapped in silk thread which stands out from the garment in loops at the ends. By the 1820s the high ‘Empire’ waistline is starting to drop towards the natural waist again. The ‘Vandyke’ style of the pointed shoulder pieces are one of the historical clothing references fashionable at the time.