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Dress thumbnail 2
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Not currently on display at the V&A

Dress

ca. 1883 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

A short puffed overskirt creates elaborate draped effects on this fashionable walking costume. Draperies were very popular during the 1880s, and pleats, poufs, gathers, panniers, swags and asymmetrical effects produced great fullness around the hips, making the waist appear very slender.

Such imaginative trimmings show how one of the major innovations in nineteenth-century dressmaking, the sewing machine, encouraged the use of complex decoration. Although it could stitch much faster than a hand-sewer and was generally employed in running up long seams, some of the time saved seemed to go into lavish arrangements of folds and pleats. In this example, the seams and gathering at the back of the skirt are machine stitched, whereas the drapery effects and finishing are carried out by hand.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 3 parts.

  • Jacket Bodice
  • Bustle
  • Skirt
Materials and techniques
Printed cotton with lace trim
Brief description
Dress, consisting of a jacket bodice, bustle and skirt, printed cotton of floral and diaper design on a blue ground, made in Great Britain, ca. 1883
Physical description
Walking dress consisting of a bodice, skirt and short, puffed overskirt. The cotton is printed with a repeating, symmetrical floral and diaper pattern in red, yellow, green and white on a powder blue ground. At the gathered cuffs of the jacket is a small lace trim.
Credit line
Given by Mrs Gibbs
Summary
A short puffed overskirt creates elaborate draped effects on this fashionable walking costume. Draperies were very popular during the 1880s, and pleats, poufs, gathers, panniers, swags and asymmetrical effects produced great fullness around the hips, making the waist appear very slender.

Such imaginative trimmings show how one of the major innovations in nineteenth-century dressmaking, the sewing machine, encouraged the use of complex decoration. Although it could stitch much faster than a hand-sewer and was generally employed in running up long seams, some of the time saved seemed to go into lavish arrangements of folds and pleats. In this example, the seams and gathering at the back of the skirt are machine stitched, whereas the drapery effects and finishing are carried out by hand.
Collection
Accession number
T.254 to B-1928

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Record createdMarch 28, 2006
Record URL
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