Not currently on display at the V&A

Girl's Cap

1915 - 1920 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This is one of a large group of childhood objects donated by Eileen Brock. Eileen was born in 1915 to a middle-class family living in North London. Her mother, Amy Piercy, was the youngest of a close family of six sisters so Eileen's early life was busy with visits and entertainments with aunts and cousins. In 1921, when Eileen was six, her father William died in Basra, Iraq, where he was serving in the army.
Eileen and Amy were very close and shared a love of music, dancing and theatre. Eileen also inherited her mother's enthusiasm for collecting; they both held on to birthday and christmas cards, presents, school books, theatrical ephmera and clothing. These ordinary but personally significant objects span the decades when education, cinema, fashion and women's lives were transformed in Britain.
The Museum of Childhood now holds this wonderul collection which offers rich insight into the everyday life of a young girl growing up after the First World War.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Cotton, lace, silk and chiffon.
Brief description
Ivory coloured cap, with silk and lace trimmings, English, 1915-1920
Physical description
Cotton skull cap, embellished with lace, silk and ribbon.
Cut tightly to the head, the cap has a wide band of parallel strips of ivory coloured machine-made lace with pleated ribbon in between, running from ear to ear around the back of the head and in a perpendicular band across the top of the head. The semicircular sections at the front and back are covered in cream chiffon in a tightly pleated design. There are ivory satin bows over each ear, and a larger one at the centre of the back.
Dimensions
  • Width: 21cm
  • Circumference: 42cm
Production typeUnique
Credit line
Given by Eileen Brock
Object history
Belonged to the donor as a child.
Summary
This is one of a large group of childhood objects donated by Eileen Brock. Eileen was born in 1915 to a middle-class family living in North London. Her mother, Amy Piercy, was the youngest of a close family of six sisters so Eileen's early life was busy with visits and entertainments with aunts and cousins. In 1921, when Eileen was six, her father William died in Basra, Iraq, where he was serving in the army.
Eileen and Amy were very close and shared a love of music, dancing and theatre. Eileen also inherited her mother's enthusiasm for collecting; they both held on to birthday and christmas cards, presents, school books, theatrical ephmera and clothing. These ordinary but personally significant objects span the decades when education, cinema, fashion and women's lives were transformed in Britain.
The Museum of Childhood now holds this wonderul collection which offers rich insight into the everyday life of a young girl growing up after the First World War.
Collection
Accession number
B.332-2012

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Record createdDecember 20, 2012
Record URL
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