Fashion Women 1800 History Notes Book 12
By Suzi Love
()
About this ebook
Love gorgeous historical women's fashions? Take a look at what women wore and carried in 1800 in Europe and around the world. Dresses, ball gowns, shoes, hats, purses, coats, gloves, shawls from museums, fashion plates, and historical houses are all shown in beautiful images. Underwear and corsets are included as well as the chains and boxes they carried.
Suzi Love
I now live in a sunny part of Australia after spending many years in developing countries in the South Pacific. My greatest loves are traveling, anywhere and everywhere, meeting crazy characters, and visiting the Australian outback.I adore history, especially the many-layered society of the late Regency to early Victorian eras. In and around London, my titled heroes and heroines may live a privileged and gay life but I also love digging deeper into the grittier and seamier levels of British life and write about the heroes and heroines who challenge traditional manners, morals, and occupations, either through necessity or desire.Tag Line- Making history fun, one year at a time
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Fashion Women 1800 History Notes Book 12 - Suzi Love
1
FASHION WOMEN 1800
After the French Revolution, the fussy styles previously affordable only by the very wealthy in European countries were replaced with ideas of simplicity in dress, behavior, and decorating.
1800 Daring Young Lady Driving Phaeton.1800 Daring Young Lady Driving Phaeton.
The neoclassic style was adopted and carried through the Napoleonic War years, partly because of Napoleon Bonaparte’s love of anything Greco-Roman.
The 1800s silhouette copied the chiton worn by the Greeks and Romans. The chiton was a tubular garment draped from the shoulders and sometimes belted beneath the bust and this style of garment was completely different to the rectangular panniered skirts of the 18th century.
Early 19th Century Morning Dress and Full Dress, English. Fashion plate via suzilove.com and John Belle's 'La Belle Assemblee', England. via Google Books (PD-180)Early 19th Century Morning Dress and Full Dress, English. Fashion plate via suzilove.com and John Belle's 'La Belle Assemblee', England. via Google Books (PD-180)
Early 1800s fashions were elegant and pretty, plus they sometimes afforded a gentleman a tiny glimpse of a well-turned ankle. Though to me that sounds like the lady has sprained her ankle rather than looking fashionably slim.
1800s Early Three Dresses, German. High-Waisted Empire line gowns that are light, airy, simplistic, and almost transparent.1800s Early Three Dresses, German. High-Waisted Empire line gowns that are light, airy, simplistic, and almost transparent.
Empire style gowns, named after Napoleon's first Empress, became popular at the turn of the century and were high waisted with skirts gathered under the bust. Fabrics were thinner, sometimes almost transparent, which would have been freezing in winter in England or Europe. Despite the danger to their health, women adopted these same light fabrics in England and modistes turned them into light and airy tubular dresses.
1800s Early Empire, Or High Waistlines. Fashions changed from fussy and heavy designs to light and flowing dresses with waists just under the bust. via Suzi Love suzilove.com1800s Early Empire, Or High Waistlines. Fashions changed from fussy and heavy designs to light and flowing dresses with waists just under the bust. via Suzi Love suzilove.com
Skirts gathered under the bust and often with more fullness at the back to allow women to walk and move freely, but once again providing little warmth. Therefore, outerwear gradually became more practical and called for thicker fabrics, such as wool.
Walking dresses, pelisses, Redingotes and half cloaks were all worn over an Empire style dress, and accessories such as shawls and oversized fur muffs were added to outfits.
Tunics were often added to give gowns an appearance of decency, especially from the back.
1800 ca. White Ball Dress, French, with a pink tunic, pink fan, and pink shoes.Fashion Plate via suzilove.com and Journal des Dames et des Modes, or Costume Parisien.1800 ca. White Ball Dress, French, with a pink tunic, pink fan, and pink shoes.Fashion Plate via suzilove.com and Journal des Dames et des Modes, or Costume Parisien.
The Lady’s Magazine gives a general round-up of the prevailing fashions for 1800. White is still the prevailing color for robes. For morning dresses, linen gowns, in large diamonds or squares, are fashionable. Indian muslins, plain or embroidered, are preferred to Florence and satins.
The white apron has become an article of dress. The hot weather has introduced the use of veils, which are worn very long, of simple muslin, or with a rich lace. We see many robes of sky-blue crape, black crape, and red-poppy crape. Those of black crape have a jet-black trimming. The designs of embroidery for shawls are of infinite variety.
Long gloves, which reach above the elbow, are not yet laid aside. Medallions are hung around the neck from crossed chains and some of these medallions are shaped like the bags, called ridicules. These reticules are of the lozenge or hexagon shape, with a small tassel at each angle. Reticules, or ridicules, are in lozenge or hexagon shapes with a small tassel at each angle.
In capotes and ribbands, the violet and dark green prevail over jonquil. Bracelets in hair, pear-shaped ear-rings, medallions on square plates, saltiers of colored stones, are