Just off the Line…Lily Absinthe Goes 1920s!

And now for a change of pace, Lily Absinthe goes 1920s…yes, 1920s! We’ve created  a wonderful Mid-1920s Downton Abbey Style made from Vintage embroidered cotton over Ciel Bleu lining, silk bands and French hemp trim, drafted from an original pattern…off to her new home.

You could say that we’re getting our Downton Abbey on, so to speak… 🙂 Here are a couple of pictures to get you all inspired:

Downton Abby Coat2

Here’s a close up of the detailing. The coat is lined in a Robin’s Egg Blue and the other fabric is a mushroom-colored eyelet that gives off a subtle hint of the blue.

Downton Abby Coat1

Lily Absinthe Goes Old West in Banning

Banning Stagecoach Days 2014

Karin and I along with the other judges. There was a wide variety of costumes modeled which was nice to see to include a Chinese washerwoman.

We have always had a love of the American West of the 19th Century in both the historical and film versions and often our projects reflects this. Also, we have had occasion to become involved in Western film projects and events. One such event was Banning Stagecoach Days in Banning California where we were invited by the Border Renegades to help judge a costume contest last September. It was a fun event marked by a completely freak hailstorm that came seemingly out of nowhere, forcing us to conduct the costume competition in a large tent, as illustrated below: 🙂

The event is scheduled for September 11-13, 2015 and for more information about the event, check HERE.

Lily Absinthe On Set and At The Premiere.

The screening room- I'd love to have this in my house.

The screening room- We’d love to have this in my house.

Last night, the Lily Absinthe team attended a first screening of the film “Kill Me” at Soho House in West Hollywood (located about a block west of the Whiskey a Go Go. Kill Me is a comedy short film about a grandmother who wants to die but can’t find anyone to kill her. Where we got involved was when the film called for some flash back/dream sequences in which the grandmother is robbing a bank with her husband in a pseudo-Old West Town and then driving off in a car.

The getaway car...

The getaway car…

And another one...

And another one…

We worked on this film about three years ago in January, 2012 out at Paramount Ranch and we supplied wardrobe for some of the background talent and worked at background artists (a fancy name for extras). It was a long day of filming starting off with a 5:30 call time on what had to be one of the coldest mornings I’ve ever experienced (and that includes Germany); one wouldn’t expect it for a place located close to ocean by Malibu but the cold was positively damp and bone-chilling. However, the attentive production team soon sent a crew of production assistants down to Starbucks and soon we were warming up with gallons of coffee. 🙂

The day warmed up from there and by noon, it was t-short weather. The shoot itself involved a bank robbery scene in which the bank manager gets shot by the grandmother and falls dead through a plate glass window. The special effects guy only had three special breakaway windows (they use sugar glass which breaks easily and presents minimal hazard to the stunt person/actor).

Waiting for the next scene to be shot. As usual in film, it's hurry up and wait.

Here I am waiting for the next scene to be shot. As usual in film, it’s hurry up and wait.

My moment of fame arrived when I was filmed running from the gunfire. I have to say that running down a wooden boardwalk in leather smooth-soled boots is not as easy as it looks and in fact, at one point I nearly tripped and fell off of the boardwalk just off-camera (the boardwalk was elevated so it would have been about three foot drop). Well, I survived but it was a challenge.

When I wasn’t risking my life running down a boardwalk, a sound man was recording me walking back and forth on another boardwalk. In later scenes, I was filmed as a towns person hanging out, sitting on a rocking chair by the bank that was going to get robbed.

In the meantime, Karin was working with some of the talent, dressing them in various items from our wardrobe collection, as pictured below:

Kill Me3And we saved the best for last, here is me at the premiere screening. Don’t I look Hollywood? 🙂

Hanging out in the screening room, enjoying some wine. Now, this is the way to end a project!

Overall, it was a fun day and a chance for us to get out of the studio and out in the field. Be on the lookout for us in more film projects in the future!

Mauveine

One of the most notable developments in textiles and fashion during the Victorian Era was the invention of synthetic dyes of which aniline violet or “Mauveine” was the first. Mauveine was invented accidentally in 1856 by a chemistry student named William Henry Perkin. Perkin, aged 18, had been given a challenge by his instructor, August Wilhelm von Hofmann,  to develop a method of synthesizing Quinine that would be cheaper than its natural form. After one failed attempt, Perkin was cleaning a black substance, aniline, out of the flask with alcohol when he noticed the alcohol reacting with the substance to produce a purple solution.

William Henry Perkin in latter years.

William Henry Perkin in latter years.

After further experimentation, Perkin found that the purple aniline substance was suitable as a fabric dye, working especially well on silk. Subsequently, Perkin patented his new invention in August 1856 and then proceeded to develop it for commercial use and marketed under the name “Mauveine”. Also, Perkin found that tannin acts as an excellent mordant, allowing the dye to be fixed to cotton. On the other hand, silk was so receptive to aniline dyes that it could over-absorb the dye, making it difficult to dye in light shades, thus the silk was dyed in weak soap lather. Also, if too much dye was used, the silk also became hard, acquiring more scroop (a crisp rustling sound) which was not always desirable.

Up to this time, the only major source for true purple dye was Tyrian Purple which was made from the secretion of several species of predatory sea snails found in the Eastern Mediterranean (later, other suitable species of sea snails were found in the Atlantic and Pacific). Tyrian Purple was very expensive and hard to produce in quantity and traditionally, the color had been reserved for the upper classes. In comparison, Mauveine was extremely cheap because the aniline was derived from coal tar and coal was abundant throughout Great Britain and Western Europe.

The significance of Perkins’s discovery was not so much in the discovery itself but rather in that fact that that fact that he was the first to turn it into a commercial product, thus founding a new industry. The idea of synthetic dyes were not new; as early as 1834, a chemist named Friedlieb Runge had isolated a substance from coal tar that turned a beautiful blue color when treated with chloride of lime.

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Mauveine caught on with the public in a major way and it wasn’t long before Perkin and other chemists had developed and brought to market a wide range of aniline and other chemical dyes in colors including various shades of blue, green, red, and yellow.

The advent of synthetic dyes revolutionized fashion. It was now possible to dye fabric in colors far brighter than anything possible with natural dyes and it could be done inexpensively. When combined with the development of mass production processes for fabric, it was now possible to produce brightly colored fabrics in large quantities that were affordable for more people. The industrial revolution had truly arrived for fashion.

Shade Card, Friedrich Bayer & Co., Germany, 1896 Victoria &  Albert Museum (T.173-1985)

Shade Card, Friedrich Bayer & Co., Germany, 1896 Victoria & Albert Museum (T.173-1985)

So, with that said, let’s take a look at just a few dresses made from the new synthetic dyes:

Fashion Plate by François-Claudius Compte-Calix (1813 - 1880),Braequet (engraver) , France, c. 1860, Victoria & Albert Museum (E.22396:330-1957) Gallery location: Prints & Drawings Study Room, level C, case 96, shelf D, box 15

Fashion Plate by François-Claudius Compte-Calix (1813 – 1880),Braequet (engraver) , France, c. 1860, Victoria & Albert Museum (E.22396:330-1957)

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Afternoon Dress, Great Britain, c. 1860; Fashion Institute of Technology, New York (2006.43.1)

Day Dress 1873

Day Dress, Great Britain or France, 1873, silk; Victoria & Albert Museum (T.51&A-1922)

The popularity of Mauveine was cemented when the Empress Eugenie of France (who was one of the leading fashion mavens of Europe in the 1850s – 1860s) adopted the color into her wardrobe, allegedly because it matched the color of her eyes. The development of the crinoline also helped push things along in that the vast expanses of fabric used in a hoop skirt showed off the luster of the mauveine dye to its best advantage.

Franz Xavier Winterhalter,

Franz Xavier Winterhalter, “Portrait of Empress Eugenie”, 1854

Color Chart1

By the early 1860s, the craze for mauvein had died down and the public’s attention had turned to a wide variety of other aniline-based dye colors coming on the market such as Magdala Red,  Manchester Brown, Martius Yellow, Nicholson’s Blue, aniline yellow, Bleu de Lyon, Bleu de Paris, and aldehyde green. Almost overnight, the market for natural dyes collapsed and eventually, even the natural colors had their synthetic replacements.