15 November 2018

L'illustration 1925



L'illustration 

1925

France

A lucky find at a brocante this summer in the south of France. On a day so hot I had to carry the magazine very very carefully, as the sun had crisped and dried the pages and the glue on the spine.

Published in Paris (où d'autre?).
No. 4286. In it's 83rd year.
Subscription for one year in France 120 francs.
Étranger 160 francs.




This was a special edition for a large event;


EXPOSITION DES ARTS DÉCORATIFS

The term Art Deco came into common parlance after this exhibition.....coming from the name of the exhibition itself.













Some quickly taken and hastily edited photographs of this gem of French loveliness. Have a peek at some of the advertisements that paint a picture of a world that vanished long ago...when damsels  relied on a decent soap to glow and simper and household goods were stark and modern and oh so gorgeous....










                   





   
         





More on the exhibition itself in a future post.

2 November 2018

Eye Bath.

BATH 
ENGLAND


THE FASHION MUSEUM


Royal Crescent












Ball Room at The Assembly Rooms














I have no photographs of the current exhibition on at the Fashion Museum, hence a few snaps of warm Bath stone and the crisp blue elegance of the ball room at the Assembly Rooms.

The Fashion Museum is outstanding. World class.
'A History of Fashion in 100 Objects' is a carefully selected (they have over 100,000 items to draw from) tour through time and fashion. Gloves, fans, shoes....and outfits. Not just a waistcoat here and a spencer there, but the whole thing. The condition of the clothes and the quality of the display makes a small town curator of costume sigh. A lot.

The Royal women exhibition (included your admission charge) was glorious.
From royal ladies dead long before I was born, through to personages I saw many many times on TV or in print during their lifetimes, there were exquisitely displayed garments.

Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother (mother of the current Queen Elizabeth II) loved a ball gown and they suited her so well..she knew the value of looking like a Queen of the royal household. You can feast your eyes on a 1954 Hartnell oyster silk satin evening gown that she wore.
Princess Margaret had such a small waist. The  Dior cream chiffon outfit she wore to Ascot in 1952 looked impossibly tiny...but newsreel from the time showed her wearing the ensemble and yes, she was tiny.

Going into the Assembly Rooms and seeing the inside of them is treat enough, but to go down a flight of stairs and then be in a world of costume, is on another plane entirely.
Lighting is dim, as you would expect, but it all helps to reinforce the feeling that you are on Planet Costume, as you walk past case after case of  fabulous sights and arresting tableaux.


One not to be missed.

FASHION MUSEUM BATH
ASSEMBLY ROOMS
BENNETT STREET
BATH BA1 2QH


Information
fashion_enquiries@bathnes.gov.uk

fashionmuseum.co.uk




18 October 2018

Mercerie, Costume et Coiffes






Musée D'Histoire Locale 


Fréjus  
France


Far to the south of France, deep in Provence, is the Roman town of Fréjus. In rue Jean Jaurès is the local history museum...Musée D'Histoire Locale. Occupying the whole of a venerable town house, the museum contains some costume and a variety of room sets; an old fashioned kitchen, a village shop, a school room and the Mercerie or Haberdashers.
The elegant first floor drawing room is hosting a small afternoon tea party. (Although judging by the shape of that pot, it could be a coffee party)

Both mistress and servant are represented, the bougeoise in fine clothes and elaborate lace, and the maid in her simpler garb.
Quilted skirts can be seen...one on the figure sitting front left and the maid by the window. These were batted with cotton in the summer and wool in the winter.


                        
          
         


                                  


There were also elegant dresses in subdued colours, all with the soft white drape of a muslin and lace fichu pinned in place.







                                                      
            


                 Not so easy to see in this picture, but the skirt wrapped around and closed up at the front.

A more elaborate chocolate brown dress was my favourite.

Finally in this room was this exquisite lace shawl? fichu?

Some traditional outfits.

                                  A couple of Coiffes....

 Hat pins, Chatelaines and possibly a skirt page? (Bottom left)

Echoes of school days...suggesting a skill level that many would envy today....

Finally La Magasin Mercerie. A great mixture of 100 years ago, 40 years ago and not so long ago.
    
                                                           
These are the first time I have seen this shape for cottons. The whole thing is a square with a cylinder down the inner middle.I could not get a clearer shot at a distance and through glass...intriguing though.



Well worth a visit when you are next in Provence.



Merci au Musée D'Histoire Locale Fréjus pour votre aide et l'utilisation des photographies.

https://frejus.fr/decouvrir-frejus/musee-dhistoire-locale/