31 May 2015

Two Weddings and a Museum

     
    Changing the century
                            and the season

         The new costume exhibit at Henfield Museum

                               A work in progress     
 
Farewell nineteenth century

A new venture and a great adventure.
This week I began a project at Henfield Museum in Sussex.


I was to take down the existing display of three Victorian costumes and replace it with a new exhibit.


Fortunately for me I was to be working with Curator Alan Barwick who knows the museum (and Henfield) inside out.
The Victorian three were released from the case, gently undone and freed from their mannequins. I packed the purple and black ensemble away, followed by the grey and black striped walking out dress and a fine amethyst flounced summer skirt. Once the nineteenth century was back in the storeroom, I suggested a wedding dress theme as a summery replacement. I was delighted when Alan brought out a Peter Jones box from the 1930s.
“Have a look in there” he said.



A (costume) dream come true.
Layer after layer of tissue, net, lace and silk.                                                                                                               
 

There was  wedding dress, underslip, mob cap with fabric flowers and a pair of silk stockings.                                                                                  


Underneath the clothes was a collection of exquisitely embroidered handkerchiefs. Made in fine lawn, edged with lace and embellished
with white work.



One has a border that looks like Swiss muslin, but I think it might be an embroidery stitch? Like French knot but flatter??? Some research needed here.
The icing on this particular wedding cake was that the museum has provenance for the dress. Photographs of the bride in the dress on the day, a copy of the wedding invitation and an order of service. Plus a report of the wedding from the paper. This gives not only ‘who when and where’, but who gave what as a wedding present. (The list contains a ‘cut glass claret jug, grapefruit glasses, a silver ash tray and two pairs of bellows’…not a toaster in sight)
In addition there are handwritten notes from the bride’s daughter, giving more background information, including identifying what names the initials on the handkerchiefs stand for and who embroidered them. One other snippet from these papers says that the Brussels lace on the dress is from the brides mothers wedding dress from 1898. A treasure trove indeed.

My display has a second wedding dress, an Edwardian model. The dress was made in India, beautiful hand embroidered and as white as the day it was worn. This dress was donated by a local lady, who is in possession of a great deal of history regarding not just the dress, but the life of the woman who wore it.
Back view
                                                       
 This dress has an almost unbelievable back story involving a maidservant marrying ‘up’ and having a life in India. But, and it is a big But, sadly no happy ever after. Perhaps it is only in a book that families forgive and children are welcomed into a father’s family… instead unhappiness was to be their constant companion. Penury, gambling, daughters forced into working in sweat shops or into life on the streets …. 

But still worse was to follow…


                                                                                           


So far so good







There is much more to come about the display and the history of the dresses. 
Keep checking the blog….



Henfield Museum website.

It’s well worth a visit….the website and the museum….

PS.
These symbols are stitched on the top of each silk stocking.
Anyone know what they mean?





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