Stitching The Night Away…

Up late stitching corsets on a rainy night. <3

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Five Days Of Rain…Bring It!

Five days of “weather” in Southern California? I love sewing corsets and gowns to the sound of the rain…bring it on! 🙂

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Worth’s Seamless Dress…

In the course of reading on Diana De Marly’s Worth: Father of Haute Couture, I came across a reference of Worth having incorporated bias cutting in his designs as early as the 189os. Needless to say, this piqued my interest and I set out to learn more. It is common fashion history knowledge that bias-cutting in dress construction was first utilized on a major scale by Madeleine Vionnet in the 1930s but the idea that Worth employed this technique earlier was a bit of a revelation to me. 🙂

So what is bias cutting? Essentially, it’s where the fabric is cut at a 45 degree angle to the fabric’s grain. Normally, fabric is cut either directly on the grain or perpendicular to the grain and most garments are constructed so that the grain runs vertical (i.e. up and down). This ensures that the fabric shapes properly, especially since the fibers running on the grain (e.g., the warp) is stronger than the fibers running crosswise (the weft). Bias cut fabric is more flexible, following the body’s contours thus creating a tighter, shapely look. Two garments made from the same pattern with regular cut and bias cut fabric can easily look very different.

To illustrate, here is a typical pattern piece and how the grain runs. If you were to cut on the bias, the the pattern piece would be angled to follow the true bias (defined as being 45 degrees from the warp and weft) rather than up and down to follow the warp.

Here is a detailed look at the fabric itself. The red arrow is the bias and it runs at a 45 degree angle to the warp and weft fibers (For a more detailed discussion, click HERE.):

However, bias cutting can easily consume far more fabric make a garment than regular cut and bias cut fabric is often harder to sew on and prone to have twisting and distortion. And just for completeness, here’s just one example of Vionnet’s bias cut dresses:

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Evening Dress, Madeleine Vionnet, c. 1932; Metropolitan Museum of Art (1982.422.8)

So back to Worth… After a little research, I managed to locate the source of De Marly’s reference, the February 20, 1892 issue of Harper’s Bazar with the dress itself illustrating the issue’s front cover and titled “Worth’s Seamless Dress”:

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And for a frontal view of the dress (unfortunately, the illustration is not the best):

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So what about the dress itself? Here’s a brief description from the February 20, 1892 edition of Harper’s Bazar:

Seamless corsages have found such favor that a seamless dress have been produced by Worth’s creative brain. This is a dress of classic wool, as ladies’ cloth or crépon [crepe], drawn smoothly over a fitted waist lining of silk, and covering a. bell-shaped skirt of silk. Cutting the cloth bias facilitates matters in these dresses, as it then clings more closely when stretched around the waist, and also furnishes greater fullness in the skirt. Seams that are absolutely necessary arc concealed by trimming, and the dress is fastened invisibly, usually on the left side. The dress illustrated gives the effect of a princess back, with round waist front. Blue cloth is the material used with sleeves and panel of narrow bias folds applied on a maize yellow ground. Plissé [a form of crépon] wools woven to give this effect can be had in various colors. The yellow contrast, now so fashionable with blue, is further given in open gold passementerie, which curves up in front of the right arm, then crosses the back diagonally to the waist, extends across the front as a girdle, to meet on the right a similar band, with which it forms an edge for the inserted trimming down the skirt. A band of fur surrounds the left arm and borders the skirt. Later in the season the fur band can be replaced by a fine ruche of gold ribbon. Changeable taffeta silks are used by French modistes for the waist and skirt lining of wool dresses, with a pinked balayeuse of the gay silk at the foot.

The above description is very interesting in that the basic style is a princess line, a style developed by Worth in the late 1870s. Also, the emphasis is on making the seams invisible, hiding them behind trim wherever possible. Also, the use of crepe provides excellent drapability along with an interesting textured effect. Crepe was made from cotton, wool, silk and linen (today, rayon is also often used). To give an idea of the fabric’s appearance, below is an example of a crepe mourning bonnet, c. 1880:

 

Crepe was used extensively for mourning wear but it was also came in other colors:

 Image result for blue cotton crepe fabric

Now while crepe forms the outside of the dress, it’s also noted that the crepe is drawn over a silk waist lining and that the cress is cut on the bias. Unfortunately, there are no further technical details and, as far as I know, no surviving dress of this type so we can only make assumptions as to the construction. However, judging from the above description, it would been that the outer fabric on the dress was cut on the bias, then anchored over an underlayer of silk (I can only assume that it’s also cut on the bias). Also, arrangement of fabric chevrons on the sleeves are also an interesting use of the bias cut. Finally, it should be noted that unlike the later dresses designed by Vionnet, Worth’s bias-cut dress is restrained with the wearer’s silhouette being shaped by the underpinnings- primarily corset and petticoat.

Bias-cutting in dress design didn’t come into its own until the 1930s but it’s clear that Worth made some pioneering efforts in this area. However, given that the basic styles of the late 19th Century were defined by the corset various underpinnings, the bias-cut style could only go so far- foundation garments were also utilized with Vionnet’s but were not anywhere as severe.

We hope that you’ve enjoyed this look at a somewhat obscure aspect of Worth’s design work and we hope to be able to post more in the future. 🙂

A Little Light Reading- Charles Frederick Worth

A knowledge of fashion history plays an essential role in the design process and one is always researching how the fashions of the past as one means of drawing inspiration for the future. Moreover, when recreating historical garments of any era, it’s essential that one learn as much as possible not only about the styles themselves, but also about how they were designed, constructed, and marketed. While online research is the first step (unfortunately, for many it’s the only step), it’s only the beginning. The next steps are examining extant original examples and reading books- a lot of books. 🙂

Books, whether recent or old, can provide great insights about fashions of the past and while we may disagree with their conclusions, they do provide interesting perspectives and are often a reflection of when they were written. In the end it’s up to the individual to make their own informed conclusions and it’s from there that the design process begins.

There are many excellent books in fashion history out there and I’d like to take the opportunity to talk about one centering on one of the greatest couturiers of all time- Charles Frederick Worth- so enjoy! 🙂

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Charles Frederick Worth (October 13, 1825 – March 10, 1896) was one of the first couturiers in the modern sense of the word and he not only influenced fashion in the Mid to late 19th Century, but his innovations also gave birth to modern haute couture. However, while the basic details of Worth’s life are well known and a large body of his work survives, there is little hard information about the man himself and his specific accomplishments.

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One of the few English language books on Worth is Diana De Marly’s book Worth: Father of Haute Couture which examines Worth’s life and career and places it in the context of the larger social and political world that Worth operated in.

De Marly gives an excellent overview of the Worth’s career and is especially strong in its coverage of the relationship with the Empress Eugénie, and the Princess Pauline von Metternich and how they were instrumental in Worth’s rise as the first celebrity couturier. The book is less strong in covering Worth’s later career after the fall of Napoleon III and the rise of the Third Republic but it still provides a good overview. Unfortunately, one of the major weak points of this book is the lack of illustrations of many of the dresses that De Marly cites although online searching through the collections at the Met and elsewhere go a long way to correct this.

Worth’s influence in eliminating the crinoline in the late 1860s and replacing it with the bustle, and then again nearly eliminating it in the late 1870s (and once again returning to a modified bustle) are well covered and she cites various surviving examples (although looking them up online was not always easy). De Marly also describes Worth’s introduction of the princess line style although I do believe that she overstates her case that it was solely invented by Worth. What is also interesting is when she briefly touches on Worth being one of the first to introduce bias-cut sleeves in the early 1890s, some 30 years before Vionnet- I only wish that she had discussed this more in depth and cited some actual dress examples, all we have to go on is an engraving.

One of the strongest parts of the book is De Marly’s detailing how Worth was not merely a designer of fancy dresses but that he was a fashion dictator, determining what looked best on his clients and then dictating the specific dress details. As De Marly points out, the taste that his clients exhibited wearing his creations was really Worth’s taste rather than those individual clients. Worth’s influence was such that before attending any major social function, his clients would stop by Worth’s atelier so that Worth could personally examine and approve their outfits (or making last-minute changes when a client’s outfit somehow fell short).

I would highly recommend this as essential reading for anyone interested in getting an in-depth view of the great couturier himself and his profound influence on the fashion world of the late 19th Century.

House of Worth, Label on Box:

P.S. Regretfully, this book has been out of print for a long time but second-hand copies can often by found here: