Not currently on display at the V&A

Hat

ca. 1941 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This green velvet hat is trimmed with green-tipped feathers and a green and pink velvet bow. The hat was made by the Danish milliner Erik Braagaard for Marie Cecile Wooster, the daughter of Baron Gustav Von Springer. Mrs Wooster and her first husband Baron Eugene Fould left Europe for North America at the outbreak of World War II, during which time she bought this hat.

Braagaard frequently used the fabric velvet and feathers in his millinery designs. In 1935, french fashion magazine L’Officiel de la Mode reported that ‘velvet, very much in favour at Braagaard’s lends itself to all the movements of wings and bows which are characteristic of this collection’. The article also reports that ostrich and egret feathers were incorporated into hat designs (‘Braagaard’ L’Officiel de la Mode, 1935 no.167 p.83).

Braagaard had a small, high end millinery salon which in 1941 had a mauve and white interior. The shop operated from the 1930s to the 1950s and was located on 17 West fifty-seventh street, New York. In 1943 Braagaard was conscripted to war service. Braagaard had an international reputation and his hats were featured not only in American publications but in the French and English media. The Costume Institute at the Metropolitan Museum of Art has five hats by Braagaard in their archive.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Velvet, feathers, petersham and elastic
Brief description
Velvet hat trimmed with feathers, made by Erik Braagaard, New York, ca. 1941
Physical description
Green velvet hat trimmed with green-tipped feathers and green and pink velvet bow. Tip tilted and the brim is shaped to a 'V' at the back. Elastic is attached to the inside petersham band.
Marks and inscriptions
  • 'BRAAGAARD Inc. New York.' (Label)
  • Transliteration
Credit line
Given by Mrs Frank Wooster
Summary
This green velvet hat is trimmed with green-tipped feathers and a green and pink velvet bow. The hat was made by the Danish milliner Erik Braagaard for Marie Cecile Wooster, the daughter of Baron Gustav Von Springer. Mrs Wooster and her first husband Baron Eugene Fould left Europe for North America at the outbreak of World War II, during which time she bought this hat.

Braagaard frequently used the fabric velvet and feathers in his millinery designs. In 1935, french fashion magazine L’Officiel de la Mode reported that ‘velvet, very much in favour at Braagaard’s lends itself to all the movements of wings and bows which are characteristic of this collection’. The article also reports that ostrich and egret feathers were incorporated into hat designs (‘Braagaard’ L’Officiel de la Mode, 1935 no.167 p.83).

Braagaard had a small, high end millinery salon which in 1941 had a mauve and white interior. The shop operated from the 1930s to the 1950s and was located on 17 West fifty-seventh street, New York. In 1943 Braagaard was conscripted to war service. Braagaard had an international reputation and his hats were featured not only in American publications but in the French and English media. The Costume Institute at the Metropolitan Museum of Art has five hats by Braagaard in their archive.
Bibliographic reference
Fashion : An Anthology by Cecil Beaton. London : H.M.S.O., 1971 417
Collection
Accession number
T.72-1974

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Record createdOctober 23, 2007
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