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  • Place of origin:

    France (made)

  • Date:

    1780s (made)

  • Artist/Maker:

    Unknown (production)

  • Materials and Techniques:

    [Dress coat] Silk velvet, silver spangles & thread, glass paste; hand-sewn and hand-embroidered

  • Museum number:

    1611&A-1900

  • Gallery location:

    In Storage

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Sprays of flowers embroidered with paste, silver spangles and purl decorate the pocket and hem of this velvet coat of the 1780s. Glass paste was first developed in the 1670s as a substitute for diamonds in jewellery. By the 1770s, it was a popular medium in embroidery. Glass pastes usually had a backing of thin metal, either silver to heighten its brilliance, or coloured foil to imitate other precious stones. The pastes on this coat have clouded and the silver backing tarnished, but when new they would have sparkled like diamonds. Once a bright turquoise, the dye colouring the silk velvet has faded, giving the coat a greenish hue.

When Beatrix Potter visited the V&A Museum in 1903, looking for inspiration for her children’s story, The Tailor of Gloucester, she was shown this coat. It appears on page 12, as a backdrop to an illustration of a little mouse wearing an 18th-century gown and cap.

Physical description

[Dress coat] A court coat of velvet (once turquoise, now faded to green) embroidered with silver spangles, thread and glass paste.

Place of Origin

France (made)

Date

1780s (made)

Artist/maker

Unknown (production)

Materials and Techniques

[Dress coat] Silk velvet, silver spangles & thread, glass paste; hand-sewn and hand-embroidered

Bibliographic References (Citation, Note/Abstract, NAL no)

Avril Hart and Susan North, Historical Fashion in Detail: the 17th and 18th centuries, London: V&A, 1998, p. 146

Associated names

Beatrix Potter

Materials

Silver thread; Silk velvet; Paste (glass); Spangles

Techniques

Hand sewing

Categories

Textiles; Fashion

Collection code

T&F

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Qr_O137725
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