Search Results for "mantua"
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Your search for posts with tags containing mantua found 22 posts
Very excited to announce that my book Shaping Femininity has a cover image and pre-order links! See below for details! About Shaping Femininity In sixteenth and seventeenth-century England, the female silhouette underwent a dramatic change. This very...
The 1680s was a decade of change in women’s fashion. The new loose-fitting mantua gown vied for popularity with traditional gowns that contained structured bodices (a battle that the new style would win in later decades) and bodies slowly began...
© The British Library Board Such charms are there in affability, and so sure is it to attract the praises of all kinds of people. It may indeed be compared to the celebrated Mrs Hussey.* It is equally sure to set off every female perfection to...
What was advertised in a colonial American newspaper 250 years ago today? “MANTU-MAKER, FROM BOSTON.” Over the past few days the Adverts 250 Project has examined the manner in which purveyors of goods and services in the colonies incorporated...
What was advertised in a colonial American newspaper 250 years ago today? “She has had the honour of being employed by several ladies in this city.” Mary Morcomb did not indicate how recently she had arrived in New York in her advertisement,...
Mantua, 1760s © Victoria and Albert Museum, London This mantua and petticoat dates from the 1760s. It is shaped from French silk, and features an undulating ermine motif. The design mimics the ermine fur trim, which is often seen in royal portraiture....
Court Mantua, c. 1760s, National Trust Each month I will be doing a short feature on a gown that catches my fancy as part of the ‘Mantua of the Month’ feature on my blog page. For April 2020, I have chosen this Court Mantua, which was featured...
Mantua of the Month is a fun feature on my blog page, which draws attention to the material culture of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The first mantua to be featured (admittedly I am publishing this a little late!) is this Court dress, c. 1750...
What was advertised in a colonial American newspaper 250 years ago today? “HANNAH COLEMAN, … late apprentice to Mrs. Wish.” Hannah Coleman made mantuas. These loose gowns worn by women first came into popularity in the late seventeenth...
Margaret Marsh was identified as a ‘Widow and Mantua Maker’ on ‘Saint Albans Street in the Parish of Saint James Westminster’ in her will. She bequeathed £1000 each to her three children, and £100 to her sister Ann...
What was advertised in a colonial American newspaper 250 years ago today? New-York Gazette or Weekly Post-Boy (September 4, 1769). “She has had the Honour of being employed by several Ladies in this City.” In an advertisement that ran in the...
Looks can be deceiving. Here, what at first glance seems to be a lovely eighteenth-century petticoat, is actually a brand-new reproduction, commissioned for an exciting new exhibit—“Fashioning the New England Family”—now...
What was advertised in a colonial American newspaper 250 years ago today? South-Carolina Gazette and Country Journal (July 26, 1768).“Mrs. Crane continues to make … the Brunswick dresses, so much esteemed in England.” In the summer...
What was advertised in a colonial American newspaper 250 years ago today? South-Carolina Gazette and Country Journal (February 16, 1768).“JOHN & SARAH CRANE, TAYLOR and MANTUA-MAKER, from LONDON.” Given their participation in the colonial...
What was advertised in a colonial American newspaper 250 years ago today? Supplement to the South-Carolina Gazette and Country Journal (December 29, 1767).“Fechtman undertakes to make stays and negligees, gowns and slips, without trying, for any...
What was advertised in a colonial newspaper 250 years ago today? Georgia Gazette (August 20, 1766).“JEAN CAMPBELL … intends to carry on the MILLENARY and MANTUA MAKING BUSINESS.” When she set up shop in Savannah, Jean Campbell wanted...
The more I dig into fashion history, the more interested I get in what was actually worn here, in Sweden, where I live. It’s not altogether easy to find information about that. So I have been very happy in diffing into a Danish website: Dragter...
Mantua Maker's advertise infrequently. When they do it is almost always looking for an apprentice. So it is rare to not only find one with details, but also one which leaves no doubt about the requirement of the person's body not a necessary...
Taking the Measure? Isn't that a technique used by tailors? Yes. It is. It is also a technique used by Mantua Makers to create a gown. Up until the publication of this research, we have assumed the technique of cutting on the body...
A recent posting of 18th Century Trade Cards on our Hive Facebook page, made me, yes, it made me spend a number of hours last night paging through a LOT of trade cards. A few of them of special interest to many of us. The British Museum has...
Notes on Post Tags Search
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