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Tag Archives: 18th century clothing

Roses

14 Tuesday Feb 2012

Posted by Trish in Antique Fabric

≈ 39 Comments

Tags

18th century clothing, Antique Fabric, Paris shopping, roses

Happy Valentine’s Day to all my readers!

My love of antique roses…especially the 19th century Bourbons Madame Ernest Calvat, Madame Isaac Perrier, Souvenir de Malmaison …which preserve the voluptuousness scent and shape of 18th century roses with improved re-bloom characteristics….is hardly content with the few roses a mild Northern California winter offers from time to time. So while I’ve been in a “less is more” mode (with blogging, as well!) and editing out the “de trop” excesses in my life…a few treasures make it over my self imposed restraints…and they invariably evoke my love of gardening!

antique portraitAn 18th century French School oval portrait…roses tucked under her blue ribboned straw hat…the same cabbagy blooms as my floriferous Madame Ernest Calvat….old rosesUp close to Madame Calvat….wish this was scratch and sniff for you…

antique textilesFrench embroidered satin waistcoat panels. More at the MET Costume Institute here.

A close up for all my textile crazy readers….that’s one of Wendy Lewis’s beautiful antique woven linens in the background. As well as the exquisite embroidery, I love the tiny hand stitching at the edges. Though a green thumb at gardening…I’m all thumbs at this gentle art!

antique textiles

I suppose you can see an ongoing theme in my textile collecting?
old roses

Madame Issac Perrier…if you have just enough space and sun for ONE old rose….it must be this one. Simply the most incredible scent. And the color is a lipstick bright cerise. Year’s ago I saw this landscaped in a row with Madame Calvat and Souvenir de Malmaison and tall Italian blue cypresses at Garden Valley Ranch which has a wonderful garden worth touring if you’re ever in Petaluma. antique textiles

Two small 18th century silks…the top a hand stitched scrap from a once grand gown …the bottom a hand loomed brocade that I just sort of imagined into this shape. Antique textiles are so evocative of the world they come from…sketching an image of what that world looked like…what frivolity excited people at the time. That intersect at my fingertips with the 18th century world never fails to amaze me.

antique screen

A recent flea market find…roses and garlands were hand painted over jute and plaster on both sides of this short three panel screen. More on this later. 
antique architectural salvage

I find I have this tendency to crave authenticity…the antithesis to the current propensity for flea market one-of-a-kind finds to be mass marketed ad nauseum. One of my favorite designers is San Francisco designer Stephen Shubel….so, like a groupie…I awaited his One King’s Lane tag sale and bought this ENORMOUSLY heavy vintage cast stone piece. Which leads me to one last thing…..

Paris flea market photo from French Kissed….

If you ever wanted to skip the tag sales and go direct to Paris, my favorite blog buddy Jermaine of French Kissed has organized two Paris shopping tours this May. They are small enough groups to squeeze the best out of Paris…but perhaps large enough to share a shipping pallet home??  She’s letting you hit the Louvre and Notre Dame on your own time, forsaking cultural for pure wicked shopping.  Anyone that knows Jermaine knows that she has fabulous taste and an innate ability to score “the deal”.  About that French phrase “de trop”…too much…excessive. Well, Jermaine is able to see through the flotsam and jetsam to find the pearls. Included on the tour is her lovely daughter Haleigh of Making Magique (formally Bardot in Blue) and their French friend Serge (whose ear I would LOVE to bend on French auction houses). Jermaine splits her time between her design work in Santa Barbara and routine visits to her two beautiful daughters in New York and Paris. I adore her. So if you ever dreamed of visiting Paris with someone else to take care of all the details and give you a curated view…check out all the details here.

French rosesAnd, again,  Happy Valentine’s Day!

‘Twas the Week before Christmas

18 Sunday Dec 2011

Posted by Trish in 18th century, Bathrooms

≈ 23 Comments

Tags

18th century clothing, Bath, Embroidery

French bath

Hello my fellow holiday revelers. Busy, busy..and the usual chaos over here. I assume you all know Beatrix Potter’s The Tailor of Gloucester? The part where silk thread and time are nearly run out?

antique textilesActual waistcoat from the Victoria & Albert museum that Beatrix Potter copied exactly for her tailor’s vest…”I have been delighted to find I may draw some most beautiful 18th century clothes at the South Kensington Museum. I had been looking at them for a long time in an inconvenient dark corner of the Goldsmith’s Court, but had no idea they could be taken out of the case. The clerk says I could have any article put on a table in one of the offices, which will be most convenient.”
(Letter to Norman Warne, 27th March 1903). More here
18th c waistcoat

Perhaps I’m drawn to embroidered waistcoats because of Beatrix Potter’s tale. Or my ineptitude at embroidery magnifies my awe of such fine stitches.  I intend to attach these 18th century embroidered vest panels to new material and possibly frame them….antique textiles

But time for sewing and other projects is quickly running out as Christmas and a just started bath project (and a dusty home) need my full attention…Bath elementsHere’s a peek at the gathered materials and inspiration. Hopefully all the materials will fall into shape and my Christmas guests (thankfully my forgiving relatives) will not have to hike upstairs to use the facilities. I tend to like the un-perfect and unfinished…hope all will get pulled together and my home will look a fraction as good as the photo below!

French fireplace

Happy holidays all…and good luck with those last minute projects. I’m hoping the mice come through for me!

Top and bottom photos from Art and Decoration June 2011

Photography Laurent Durand et Christophe Rouffio

Threads of Feeling

08 Sunday May 2011

Posted by Trish in 18th century

≈ 21 Comments

Tags

18th century clothing, 18th century lifestyle, 18th century textiles, Antique textiles

Antique textile exhibit

The World of Interiors did a lovely story last March about an 18th century

Foundling hospital created by Captain Thomas Coram. Having made his fortune

in trade with the colonies, in his retirement he had noticed on early morning walks

from Rotherhithe into the city of London numerous swaddled babies left on the

steps of various Churches in the hopes that the abandoned babies would be

taken care of . By 1739 the foundling hospital he created with the help of 375

others, including six dukes and 11 earls became the first charity to received a

royal charter, and in 1741 received it’s first orphans. Recently discovered is an

archive of 18th century fabrics that were collected as part of paperwork to

admit each child. Though no question were asked of the women, no names were

required, they were asked by the hospital to leave a small token of remembrance

in case they were able to return to claim their child. Sarah Bender left the scrap

above with her son Charles, who she returned to claim nine years later.

Antique textile exhibit

Though many left nothing, others left trinkets, beads,  keys,  ribbons, and fabric cut

from a mother’s hem or sleeve that was attached to the registration billet. Sadly, of

the 16, 282 children admitted between 1741 and 1760, only 152 were reclaimed.

The poignancy of the hopeful and loving scraps pinned to so many forms tell a

wistful story in the Threads of Feeling exhibit held at the Foundling Museum last

March. The heart is a reoccurring emblem, as well as fabrics decorated with

flowers, birds, butterflies.

18th century textile

Closeted in dark archives, the textiles have survived the centuries in

remarkable condition and are a glimpse into a wide swathe of the social

economic population. Each scrap tells a story.  If you’re a fabric nut

or a fan of old script…you’ll love this glimpse into the 18th century…

 Curator John Styles, the author of Dress of the People and Threads of Feeling

brings to light the significance of what is now recognized as Britain’s

largest collection of everyday textiles. Threads of Feeling exhibit

photos here, more photos and review of exhibit here

garden roses

The kitchen counter is crowded with garden roses

and my Mother’s coming for a visit. One child will undoubtedly

 call from college and the other might help me with the weeding!

Happy Mother’s Day to all!

*

From Swatch with Mother

by Frances Spalding

World of Interiors March 2011

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