miss-rumphius asked: I just have to tell you how much I love your blog! It's so beautiful. And I love that you are sharing your knowledge of historical fashions. I know a little bit about historical fashions but this blog has taught me loads more and also encouraged me to read up on these fashions more too. <3
Thank you so much for your kind words. It truly is my passion and I love hearing from people who also enjoy historic fashion.
Jean Hallée evening dresses | c. 1910-1915
cavetocanvas:
Two dresses (French) c. 1810
From the Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History:
The combination of white mull, a thin and almost sheer cotton, with a cylindrical silhouette and a high Empire waistline comprises a potent evocation of classical dress. Although there are many images depicting the belting of chitons and peploi above the natural waistline, the raised waist was rarely positioned directly under the bust. This Neoclassical mannerism abetted the illusion of the body as a dramatically linear and columnar form. Fashionable Directoire and Empire beauties, however, did not embrace the architectonic solidity of ancient caryatids. Instead, their classicism was aligned with an arcadian “naturalism” that rationalized the disclosure of the supple female form. Observers of the period frequently deplored the absence of modesty conveyed by a style that was predicated on the prominence and exposure of the breasts and on the barely veiled body. The women of ancient Greece, generally swathed in modesty, would have been startled by this promiscuous public display.
(via cavetocanvas)
omgthatdress:
1900s dress via The Hermitage Museum
theniftyfifties:
Model wearing an evening dress by Yves St Laurent, 1959.