1890s Style- Evening Wear, Part 4

ball gown fashion plate 1899

By the mid 1890s, the gigot sleeve trend was in full bloom and while perhaps not as extreme as the sleeves found on day dresses, it did exert an influence on evening dresses.
Fashion Plate Ball Gown 1897 Evening Gown

Evening Gown c. 1894 Morin-Blossier

Morin-Blossier, Evening Gown, c. 1894; Vintage Textile sales website

Evening Gown c. 1894 Morin-Blossier

Close-Up Of Bodice

Maison Felix Evening Dress 1895

Maison Felix, Evening Dress, 1895; Metropolitan Museum of Art (C.I.65.16.1a–d)

Evening Gown c. 1895

Evening Gown, c. 1895; The Museum at FIT (2007.27.1)

The above are just some examples of the gigot sleeve trend going on during the mid 1890s. Although not as extreme as the sleeves found on day dresses, we still see greater attention paid to this area than before.

Evening Gown Ball Gown Worth c. 1896 - 1897

Worth, Evening Dress, c. 1896 – 1897; Galleria del Costume di Palazzo Pitti via Europeanafashion

However, as with all fashion trends throughout the ages, a particular style will be developed to an extreme and a subsequent reaction will arise in opposition. This was the situation with gigot sleeves and by the late 1890s, sleeves had once again acquired become slender proportions. Fixing a precise date as to when this shift began is not easy but even as early as late 1896, there were rumblings in the fashion world as detailed in this passage from the September 13, 1896 edition of the Los Angeles Times:

The world may stop wondering now, for at last Mrs. Fashion has consented to speak about autumn and winter modes. The gist of her talk, however concerns skirts and sleeves (after all the two vital points of dress) both of which are to grow beautifully smaller and narrower until the reaction against width has been satisfied.

Already indeed, the circumference of the smallest skirt is reduced by more than half of what it was in the spring while a skirt  with godets all around is to midish opinion, almost as old fashioned as overskirt and paniers [sic].

In reaction, evening dress sleeves began to become somewhat simplified with an emphasis on decorated straps or sleeves constructed with loose layers of gauze/tulle. Of course, there was a wide degree of variation in the sleeve style but nevertheless, one can see a movement away from the over gigot style.

Doucet Ballgown 1898 - 1900

Doucet, Ballgown, 1898 – 1900; Metropolitan Museum of Art (2009.300.3275a–c)

Doucet Ballgown 1898 - 1900

Three-Quarter Front View

Doucet Ballgown c. 1898 - 1902

Doucet, Ballgown, c. 1898 – 1902; Metropolitan Museum of Art (2009.300.3274a, b)

Worth Ballgown 1898

House of Worth, Ballgown,, 1898; Metropolitan Museum of Art (2009.300.1324a, b)

Worth Evening Dress 1896

Evening Dress, Worth, 1896; Palais Galliera, musée de la Mode de la Ville de Paris (GAL1978.20.1)

Worth Ball Gown 1899

Worth, Ball Gown, 1899; Metropolitan Museum of Art (26.381a-b_front 0004)

Aside from the sleeves, there was little else to distinguish evening dresses during the 1890s- all were designed in a distinct hourglass style with narrow waists and large multi-gored skirts with trains of varying length. Finally, although the pronounced bustles of the late 1880s had disappeared, padding was still used as a means of maintaining  a smooth silhouette and providing support to the train.

Transitions in fashion styles is not always clear-cut and direct, rather it’s often more of a blur as an older style gives way a newer one. Fashion change came at a much slower pace than what we see today and changes that were measured in years are now measured in months, if not weeks and days. By no means to we profess to have the last word when it comes to evening fashions of the 1890s but rather, we try to point out some of the salient featured. We hope you’ve enjoyed this brief tour of 1890s evening wear and we look forward to posting more about this in the future.



Happy Chinese New Year!

Happy Chinese New Year! Since we’re in San Francisco and close to Chinatown, we thought we’d post this image of the traditional dragon dance from circa 1890:

Image result for san francisco 1890s

Trending For October 1897…The Return Of The Bustle?

Normally, one does not associate the bustle with 1890s style but we recently came across this item from the October 10, 1897 edition of the Los Angeles Herald that claims that the bustle will be making a return:

We have heard rumors of this event for a very long time, but that it would really come, no one had the grace to acknowledge until the present time. l am free to admit, however, that I think the bustle in its present form is bound to be popular, for it is far from being the monstrosity of a few years ago. Neat and graceful, it is just large enough to round up the hips and give a stylish set to the skirt and. prevent its sagging.

The modern idea is to use the bustle in the only sensible way- that is, to suit the individual, and not have one shape and style for everybody. Thus they are being made in great variety, both long and short, and some much fuller than others, and if we will only select one for ourselves which is suited to our particular figure, I think it will really be acceptable. The style most in vogue is moderately long and has hip extensions, which suit the woman who is tall and not too full of outline. But, as I say, there are shapes to suit everybody and no rule can be said to govern this important matter. Each must choose her own style. But a pad of some sort is essential In order to be fashionable.

WHAT? The bustle returning…just what exactly is the author talking about? Well, to begin, it’s definitely not the previous styles, either the 1880s style bustle or its 1870s predecessor, which the author terms “a monstrosity.” What exactly did the author have in mind? Well, probably something more along these lines like this bustle pad:

Bustle c. 1895 - 1905

Bustle, c. 1895 – 1905; Metropolitan Museum of Art (C.I.44.48.8)

Bustle c. 1895 - 1905

Going a bit later, we have this example from 1907:

Bustle Pad 1907

Bustle Pad, 1907; FIDM Museum (2004.5.9)

 

Bustle Pad 1907

Bustle Pad 1907

The Label- This specimen appears to have never been used.

Bustle pads came in an assortment of sizes and types as detailed in this page out of the 1902 edition of the Sears and Roebuck Catalog:

Sears Catalog No. 111 1902 Edition

It’s interesting how ideas change- from the cage-like bustles/tornures of the 1870s and 80s to the fairly minimal padded versions of the 1890s and early 1900s. But either way, the goal was achieving a ideal fashion silhouette that could only be accomplished through the use of body modification. While the specific methods have changed, body modification is still sought after today. 🙂

Trending For April 1895

Sleeves and Skirt_April 1895 Los Angeles Herald

Sometimes a style element can exert such a dominance that it defines fashion for a particular era. For the mid-1890s, gigot or leg-of-mutton sleeves was one such element. While styles were mostly set in Paris, and to a lesser extent London and New York, they were commented on just everywhere in the Western world to include sunny Southern California as with this commentary written by a one Judic Chollet (apparently she was a contract writer, her columns on fashion appear in a number of newspapers) that appeared in the April 28, 1895 issue of the Los Angeles Herald:

It takes as much material now to make a modish pair of sleeves as it took a few years ago to make a fashionable skirt, when the latter was tight, and scant so as to cling closely to the figure. The newest sleeve, if properly cut, drapes itself in full, rich folds to within an inch or two of the wrist, thus making the forearm appear larger than do the tights deep cuffs that are usually worn. The increasing of the girth of the forearm of course reduces the apparent size of the hand.

The most fashionable sleeve requires four yards of material, if it is narrow, as much is wasted in tho cutting. Figured stuffs also entail waste, as the pattern must run in the same direction and be properly matched. Sleeves of different fabric from the dress are still in great vogue, but there is a disposition among the best modistes to return the old regime and to make me gown all of one stuff, with the exception
of the revers and trimming.

But it wasn’t just above the sleeve- there was also the skirt to consider in this technical commentary:

The secret of the cut of the new skirts lies in the proper proportioning of the gores and in the skillful little darts that make the upper part fit smoothly round the hips and at the waist line. Tweed 42 inches wide is good economy, or single width stuff at 22 Inches. The wide material is the more economical, as if the material be plain, or with a pattern that can be turned tip or down, a great saving is secured. All the skirt pieces must be cut into gores, each width making two of these shaped pieces. The front breadth is an exception, as the fold goes in front, making the center, the sides being sloped away to join to the next gores. The selvages of all the gores are turned toward the back, and the back seam is sloped on both sides. Three and a half widths of 42 inch material will make a skirt, which consists of seven distinct pieces. side and four gores for the back. If silk be used or any 22 inch material, it is a little wasteful, as each breadth would make a gore by sloping off one side. The lining fits better if it were cut exactly the size of each gore, tacked together and then seamed together, but many people can manage to make the lining separate from the skirt and tack them top and bottom. In this case the skirt breadths are arranged before the back seam is joined, and then the seam of four ply keeps the skirt from dropping in the center. Crepon and all materials likely to stretch should be lined breadth by breadth.

So, given the above description, the writer goes on to provide an example:

Sleeves and Skirt_April 1895_2 Los Angeles Herald

And the accompanying description:

The gown shown in the sketch has a godet skirt of brocaded silk:, black and white on a straw ground. The bodice is entirely covered with jet and is trimmed with straw ribbon arranged in yoke shape, with a bertha of loops. The belt is also of straw ribbon, fastening on the left side with a bow, one end of which drops upon the skirt and is fastened near the foot with a large knot. The sleeves are of brocade and the draped collar of straw satin.

In many ways, the above commentary pretty much captures the essence of mid-1890s style, at least when it comes to daywear. Of course, must of this comes as no surprise to anyone with a passing familiarity of the period yet it’s interesting to read commentary from the period detailing how they saw it. It’s just one of a multitude of small details that only serve to enhance our understanding of historical garments.