All posts filed under: 19th Century

Queen Victoria’s wedding dress: the one that started it all

When the question “Why do brides wear white” is asked, the most frequent answer is “Because Queen Victoria did”, or “to show that they are virgins.” The first answer is more or less accurate, but glosses over centuries of white wedding dresses worn before Queen Victoria’s wedding, and decades of coloured wedding dresses after her wedding, and also doesn’t explain why Victoria wore a white wedding dress.  The 2nd answer is mostly rubbish and dates to the mid-20th century. Long before Victoria, white was a popular choice for wedding dresses, at least among the wealthy nobility. Weddings were usually more about political alliances and transfers of wealth than they were about romance, and so the wedding dress was just another excuse to show the wealth and culture of the brides family.  Wealth could be demonstrated with jewelry (brides in some parts of Renaissance Italy, for example, wore their dowry sewn onto their dress as jewels), but textiles were also an important means to display wealth, and the more elaborate the weave of the fabric, and …

What’s with the Megs?

Two weeks ago my poll asked which Little Woman you were.  I was quite surprised with the responses.  The poll responses looked like this: Meg: 12 of 29 Jo: 11 of 29 Beth: 2 of 29 Amy: 4 of 29 I can’t believe it!  The largest amount of you identified with Meg! I thought no-one identified with Meg!  She was always the most boring of the March girls to me.  Sure, she was the prettiest, but other than that, as far as I could see she didn’t have a lot going for her.  She wasn’t bright or witty or talented like her sisters.  As I read the book, she idolised conventional society, and had to be basically bashed over the head with lessons to make her realise that it wasn’t all it was stacked up to be.  She didn’t even realise that she loved Mr Brooks until Aunt March warned her off him.  And then she married him and settled down and was a boring, conventional Victorian mother.  Blah Me, I have all of Jo’s …

Beautiful shoes to admire from afar, and beautiful shoes to own

I love shoes.  And as a fashion and textile historian, I often find myself nose to glass (or computer screen), drooling over a fabulous pair of antique shoes which I will never own, and which I couldn’t fit even if I did. These are my current favourites: I want them!  I love them!  I’d give so much to see the dress they were worn with! Alas, I cannot have them. But, I can console myself a little bit, because there are some utterly gorgeous, historically accurate, fairly reasonably priced shoes that I can have.  These ones: The fabulous American Duchess has gone to a lot of work to design these shoes and to make them available to other costumers and historical enthusiasts.  They are dyeable silk, and are fully leather lined.  You can wear them with buckles, or with bows.  And, if you order before April 22 you save $20.  Sweet! I’m getting a pair (two if I am lucky) for my birthday.  I can’t wait to decide what colour to dye them…and how to …