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Not currently on display at the V&A

Dress

1911-12 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This silk day dress was made by London fashion house Mascotte. Mascotte of 89 Park street was one of the great houses of the Edwardian period and like the house of Lucile, a much more famous contemporary, was run by a Society Woman, Mrs Cyril Drummond. This dress was worn by Miss Heather Firbank (1888-1954) and is part of a collection of well over 100 pieces of her clothing acquired by the museum in 1960. The collection spans from around 1905-mid 1920s and includes garments by many of the top fashion houses of the period including Lucile, Redfern and Reville and Rossiter. Items from Miss Firbank's wardrobe can also be found in the collections of the Museum of London, Northampton Museum and The Costume Gallery in Manchester which has a near identical Mascotte dress formerly owned by Heather.

This dress shows the new slim line and tubular skirt of the 1910s. Its almost austere appearance is made more feminine with the addition of a double line of self fabric decorative buttons down the front and at the cuffs and a purple cord sash which ties around the waist and falls at one side. Decorative ties such as these were highly fashionable and demonstrate an Eastern influence which remained popular until the outbreak of war in 1914.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Silk chiffon over silk, grosgrain, lace, boned, embroidered
Brief description
Afternoon dress of silk chiffon over silk and lace, designed by Mascotte, London, 1911-12
Physical description
Afternoon dress of purple silk chiffon over purple silk. Facings effect in soft and opaque silk with rows of closely spaced parallel buttons down the front, and with a silk rope belt with tassels. With grosgrain inner waist stays and boning, and lace and whitework embroidered collar and cuffs.
Marks and inscriptions
Mascotte 89 Park Street, Park Lane
Object history
Worn by Miss Heather Firbank
Production
89 Park Street, Park Lane, London
Summary
This silk day dress was made by London fashion house Mascotte. Mascotte of 89 Park street was one of the great houses of the Edwardian period and like the house of Lucile, a much more famous contemporary, was run by a Society Woman, Mrs Cyril Drummond. This dress was worn by Miss Heather Firbank (1888-1954) and is part of a collection of well over 100 pieces of her clothing acquired by the museum in 1960. The collection spans from around 1905-mid 1920s and includes garments by many of the top fashion houses of the period including Lucile, Redfern and Reville and Rossiter. Items from Miss Firbank's wardrobe can also be found in the collections of the Museum of London, Northampton Museum and The Costume Gallery in Manchester which has a near identical Mascotte dress formerly owned by Heather.

This dress shows the new slim line and tubular skirt of the 1910s. Its almost austere appearance is made more feminine with the addition of a double line of self fabric decorative buttons down the front and at the cuffs and a purple cord sash which ties around the waist and falls at one side. Decorative ties such as these were highly fashionable and demonstrate an Eastern influence which remained popular until the outbreak of war in 1914.
Collection
Accession number
CIRC.643-1964

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Record createdDecember 21, 2007
Record URL
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