Never underestimate the power of petticoats!

We are hard at work on another creation that we will be unveiling very soon so stay tuned… 🙂
Never underestimate the power of petticoats!

We are hard at work on another creation that we will be unveiling very soon so stay tuned… 🙂
We at Lily Absinthe want to wish everyone out there a happy Thanksgiving, no matter where you are. Thanksgiving is a somewhat unique holiday in that it speaks to our ideals and aspirations as a nation and while throughout the years we may have fallen short of the ideal, we still strive to make it a reality. President Rutherford B. Hayes’ Proclamation No. 247, officially establishing the holiday, says it best:
At no period in their history since the United States became a nation has this people had so abundant and so universal reasons for joy and gratitude at the favor of Almighty God or been subject to so profound an obligation to give thanks for His loving kindness and humbly to implore His continued care and protection.
Health, wealth, and prosperity throughout all our borders; peace, honor, and friendship with all the world; firm and faithful adherence by the great body of our population to the principles of liberty and justice which have made our greatness as a nation, and to the wise institutions and strong frame of government and society which will perpetuate it – for all these let the thanks of a happy and united people, as with one voice, ascend in devout homage to the Giver of All Good.
I therefore recommend that on Thursday, the 25th day of November next, the people meet in their respective places of worship to make their acknowledgments to Almighty God for His bounties and His protection and to offer to Him prayers for their continuance.
In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed.
Done at the city of Washington, this 1st day of November, A.D. 1880, and of the Independence of the United States the one hundred and fifth.
R.B. HAYES
By the President:
WM. M. EVARTS, Secretary of State.
With that, we give thanks for our good fortune and we give thanks to all our friends for being friends!
Adam & Karin
Previously, we’ve seen what was trending for November 1886, now let’s take a look at the December 1886 issue of Peterson’s Magazine:

Below is a description of each figure, from left to right:
Fig. I – Walking Dress, Of Dark Green Cashmere. The long wrap is made of striped woolen, plain in front and over the arms, and cut to figure to the waist at the back. It falls in full plaits over the tournure, and is trimmed with fur. The hat is of black velvet, trimmed with fur. The hat is of black velvet, trimmed with large full bows of yellow ribbon and two stiff feathers.
Fig. II – Visiting Dress, Of Red Camel’s Hair. The petticoat is of velveteen of a darker shade than the dress. The skirt is put on full around the bodice, and is draped in front diagonally. At the back, it falls in straight folds. The long bodice is made full in front. The skirt and cuffs are trimmed with fur, and a fur boa is worn around the neck. Hat of red velvet, trimmed with velvet and a stiff bird’s-wing.
Fig. III – Evening Dress, Of Yellow Silk. The skirt is short and laid in long box-plaits. At the back, it is quite full over the tournure. The front is trimmed with a wide panel of the silk, embroidered in light-brown. The very plain bodice has the same embroidery down the front, and is edged with large pearl beads.
Fig. IV – Evening Dress, Of Light Blue Surah. The skirt is laid in plaits at the sides and back. In front, it is plain, with a fall of deep white lace over it. The tunic is put on full to the bodice, is looped away from the lace with a bunch of white roses on the left side. At the right side, it is drawn further back, and falls in a puff behind. The bodice is plain, pointed back and front, and is trimmed with folds of the silk and knots of satin ribbon.
Fig V – Walking Dress, Of Black Figured Cloth. The bodice is cut long at the back over the tournure, then falls in straight full folds. In front, it is quite plain, but opens at the side over a velvet panel. The bodice in front is very long, plain, and pointed; The whole dress is trimmed with rosary-beads. large velvet bow.
Of particular interest from the above description is the use of Surah for evening dresses stands out. Surah is an even-sided fabric woven in a twill pattern from fine silk filaments (today, polyester is also used). Often patterns are printed on it by the direct print/rolle method. This fabric has a smooth, fine hand and a bright, shiny luster. Below is an example:

 Another fabric of interest is camel’s hair:

Camel’s hair is typically woven in a twill pattern and can be 100% camel hair or more often, a blend of wool and camel’s hair. Camel’s hair has a soft, silky hand and was widely used in day dresses during the late 19th Century.
So what was trending from Paris for December 1886? According to Peterson’s:
Walking-suits are now shown in soft-finished cloth and in vigogne [vicuña], the favorite colors being silver-gray, dark brown, and prune-color. A costume in silver-gray cloth has a long full tunic, draped at the back over a plain underskirt bordered with a wide band of Astrakhan-fur. The short tight-fitting jacket is sleeveless, and is bordered with a band of gray Astrakhan, the whole front of the wrap being composed of Astrakhan. This jacket is worn over a blouse-waist in white crape [crepe], finished at the wrists and throat with bands of gray and silver passementerie. Sometimes, the blouse-waist is composed of scarlet crape with similar trimming. The tunic is sloped forward in front, and terminates there at the waist in two long scarf ends, turned over each other, and each finished with a large gray-and-silver tassel.
Another very graceful and artistic walking-dress is in seal-brown vigogne and golden brown Sicilienne. The vigogne overskirt reaches the edge of the hem in front, and is sloped upward at the sides, and looped at the back over a perfectly plain Sicilienne under skirt. The dress is cut Princess, and has a vest and sleeves of the Sicilienne, ornamented with gold passementerie. Over this is worn a dolman-shaped wrap, finished in front with long ends that turn over each other, and at the waist at the back with a wide band of gold-and-brown passementerie, simulating a belt, and seeming to confine the dolman to the figure.
For visiting or reception wear, Worth is making costumes in satin and velvet. The skirt of one that I saw has a very short satin overskirt in front, the back being formed of long wide. flat plaits, and the velvet underskirt being laid in plaits in front, and gathered at the sides half-way down its length. The corsage is in satin. A novelty in the make of this dress was that the drapery was all lined with black brocaded satin.
The above notes are interesting in that it mentions the use of vigogne. or vicuña, and Sicilienne as dress fabrics. So what are these?
Well, first we will start with the vicuña whose wool is one of the rarest natural fibers in the world.  Vicuña wool comes from the Vicuña, a camelid found in the high alpine areas of the Andes Mountains in South America. TheVicuña is related to the llama but has not been domesticated. The wool is extremely fine and has excellent heat retention in relation to its weight. The wool is expensive because Vicuña can only be shorn once every three years and they live in the wild and thus, were usually killed and then shorn to the point where they nearly extinct in the 1960s (today, they have been revived and are not killed).
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Today, Vicuña wool is still very expensive, averaging roughly $21,000 for just an off-the-rack suit coat.

Given the wool’s relative rarity, I would suspect that a good portion of the wool being marketed as Vicuña in the late 19th Century was probably a wool blend with cheaper fibers making up the bulk of the fabric. 🙂
As for Sicilienne, it was a variety of poplin fabric composed of silk and wool fibers. The fabric was a unbalanced plain weave with silk filament as the warp fiber and wool as the weft fiber. The individual wool fibers are thicker and heavier than the silk filaments thus creating a pronounced ribbed appearance. According to some references, the wool was cashmere.
We hope you have enjoyed this little trip into 1886 and hope you all have drawn some inspiration. There were a variety of fabrics and colors available to Victorians and many of the same fabrics are obtainable today (although you may have to pay a premium as in the case of the Vicuña 🙂 ).
Stay inspired!
For over four months we have been working on a wedding dress for an amazing client that was introduced to us at Clockwork Couture in Burbank. Until now, in deference to confidentiality, we have only been able to give vague hints as to the specific details but now that the wedding done and the client happily married off, we are free to reveal all and our future design plans! So join us as we reveal an exciting new side of Lily Absinthe Couture…
Behold, thirty yards of the most glorious Cambodian Silk, hand carried on a plane across several oceans by a close friend of the bride. It was only a meter wide, around 10 momme (a term used for the weight of silk) and a satin-faced faille…there is nothing that can be found like it in this country…believe me, I tried. The closest equivalent started at the $80 level and it didn’t even compare to the wedding silk…This textile was amazing to work with!
The patterns? Why ours, of course! I drafted a basic curved bodice block (worn over one of our own Lily Absinthe Corsets) and started from there. The entire gown (except for the pleats, ruches, and ruffles) are flatlined on ivory polished cotton and cotton batiste, and like all true couture…it’s completely hand sewn and finished except for the foundation seams, it’s beautiful inside and out.
The bodice has an additional embroidered cotton bordered net overlay from the same cotton net that makes up two of the four front skirt swags. The neckline has an amazing stand_up collar that tapers to nothing in the front neckline, it’s completely lined with hand-shirred English Net. The sleeves have a front sheer insert of more English cotton net that I shirred, then used some antique corded lace that had a strategic decorative edging that I used for negative space so the netting would show. The gorgeous embroidered tambour lace flounce at the elbow is…antique, of course. It was my gift to the bride for her “Something Old.”
The Skirt with the Six Foot Train…all of the Sixty panels of pleating were all done in house, with double narrow hemmed edges via one of my antique sewing machines here, just like it was traditionally done. All the bustles and swags are lined with inner ruffles of netting for shape, so no matter how the bride moves, the gown moves with the wearer with no adjustments needed. I constructed a petticoat from the same draft as the skirt, filled with ivory taffeta ruffles, and ties that correspond to ties underneath the actual skirt…which makes both garments move as one, with that wonderful rich swishing noise that gorgeous fabrics make. There are vertical panels of knife pleating edged with corded lace with shirred English Net panels that are completely undersewn (invisibly to hold those pleats in place), and to put a crown on top…the amazing traditional fleurs and orange blossoms that the talented bride hand made herself were the perfect accent!
This gown was a joy to design, pattern, and construct. I cried a bit when I delivered it to the bride, it was like losing a beautiful friend that lived here in our atelier for so long. Â Here at Lily Absinthe, our clients come here for gorgeous gowns and corsets, but tend to remain friends. It’s an unexpected surprise that we don’t take for granted, but consider it a perk of this place! I’m already constructing the next gown (not much sleep lately) so stay tuned this winter for more gorgeous Lily Absinthe Couture Corsets and Gowns and sharpen your pencils… come visit me with your ideas and we’ll make your Dream Dresses and Corset Fantasies a Reality <3




Sleeve Detail – The Flowers Were Made By The Bride


A Lily Absinthe bridal gown that left the atelier last week…a blog post with images is coming. I cried when I left this with the bride, this gown has a piece of my heart <3