All posts filed under: 20th Century

A 1930s/40s Canterbury Woollen Mills Swimsuit

As a last treat for the Historical Sew-Fortnightly ‘By the Sea’ week, I thought you might enjoy seeing the one piece* of vintage swimwear in my collection: a late ’30s, or 1940s knit wool swimsuit from the Canterbury of New Zealand.   (*Actually, that’s not entirely true.  I do have a couple of late ’50s/early ’60s swimsuits – but this one might be as early as 1938, so replicating it would be within the HSF guidelines). NZ, as a major wool producer, had a number of its own woollen mills and manufacturers in the 19th and throughout the 20th century.  One of these was the Canterbury Woollen Mills, based in Ashburton, just south of Christchurch, in the  Canterbury region of the South Island.  The mill was actually known as the Ashburton Woollen Mills from its founding in 1885 until 1890.  I am relatively certain that it was this mill that produced Canterbury swimwear (just like the Roslyn Woollen Mill produced Roslyn swimwear) Protectionist laws throughout most of the 20th century made importing clothes prohibitively expensive, …

Rate the Dress: ’50s nautical Norell dress-off

Last week I posted an 1860s seaside frock in one of my (many) favourite colour combinations: white, yellow and aqua.  Alas, the colours, combined with the waistless bodice (so characteristic of 1860s outerwear, but so anathemic to modern aesthetics) elaborate scallops, and long tails with pom-poms had you calling ‘circus marquee’.  The circus left town with a disappointing  5.8 out of 10. Intriguingly, of all the votes, only one of you gave it a x.5 score  – I guess you all had solid feelings about it! Today’s Rate the Dress has a twist.  I’m not just showing you a dress to rate: I’m showing you two dresses with the same theme, by the same designer, but with quite different silhouettes, for a Rate the Dress-Off. You’ll rate both dresses, and we’ll see how the overall look comes off, plus which dress you prefer. First, a sleek shift dress, with Norell’s classic sailor collar, red silk tie, halter back and blue trim: Then a full skirted sun-frock, with exactly the same bodice, but a gathered dirndle …

Sea at Sunset dress: 1st wearing

One of the three items I’m making for the By the Sea challenge is the lace evening dress inspired by the glowing hills and muted sea at sunset in New Zealand. The dress had a pressing deadline: I had a wedding to attend, and needed a frock to wear.  The wedding is past, the dress got made (in a massive rush, and only thanks to some help from the lovely Lynne), and worn, and I got lots of compliments on it. But…. …I’m not quite happy with it. Here is what it looked like at the wedding. I ended up wearing it with a stunning early 20th century black feather boa (a gift from the wonderful Lynne) instead of the Capelet of Yay, because the Capelet paired with the dress was just a little  too  striking for the wedding, and the boa was  sooooooo  gorgeous and looked perfect with the dress. I felt great in the dress, it was really comfortable, it worked well for the wedding, and I got tons of compliments. But…. …looking …