Dress
c.1905 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This set consists of a separate skirt, a sleeveless jacket bodice, two separate sleeves and two deep curved crescent shapes, which were probably intended to form the front and back of a bodice, mounted on an undergarment. An original box for "Hayward's Lacemen" was given with the lace sections.
The sections are made entirely of hand-made bobbin and needle-lace, in a period when machine-made lace was ubiquitous. The design of the lace incorporates symmetrically organised daisies, lilacs, and other flowers, around inset medallions of 'point de gaze'.
The sections are made entirely of hand-made bobbin and needle-lace, in a period when machine-made lace was ubiquitous. The design of the lace incorporates symmetrically organised daisies, lilacs, and other flowers, around inset medallions of 'point de gaze'.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Parts | This object consists of 6 parts.
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Materials and techniques | Made from Brussels Point Duchesse lace |
Brief description | Dress in 6 parts consisting of sleeveless jacket bodice, skirt, two sleeves, and two further shaped bodice panels, made of Brussels Point Duchesse lace, c.1905. |
Physical description | This set consists of a separate skirt, a sleeveless jacket bodice, two separate sleeves and two deep curved crescent shapes, which were probably intended to form the front and back of a bodice, mounted on an undergarment. An original box for "Hayward's Lacemen" was given with the lace sections. The sections are made entirely of hand-made bobbin and needle-lace, in a period when machine-made lace was ubiquitous. The design of the lace incorporates symmetrically organised daisies, lilacs, and other flowers, around inset medallions of 'point de gaze'. |
Credit line | Given by Lucy Bulpin |
Object history | The dress pieces belonged to the donor’s mother’s Danish great- aunt, Sophie Allcroft, neé Meyer (1869-1946). In 1907 Sophie married Arthur Allcroft, from the Dent- Allcroft firm of glovemakers. According to family tradition the dress was bought for her court presentation, but this never took place. There is a similar set in the Museum Boymans-van Beuningen, Rotterdam which was worn at the German court by Mathilda, Gravin zu Dohna (1861-1943) of Ober-Schlesien. This example is illustrated in Spitz: Luxus Zwischen Tradition und Avantgarde , Museum fur Kunst und Kulturgeschichte der Stadt Dortmund (Dortmund, 1995) and Kant in Mode / Mode in Kant 1815-1914 by Patricia Wardle and Mary de Jong (Utrecht, 1985). As Dries Debackere describes in his article (see References) a further set is in the collection of the Art and History Museum in Brussels. |
Bibliographic reference | Dries Debackere, '(Un)constructed, Reconstructed and Deconstructed Again. An Examination of the Context, Reconstruction and Display Possibilities of Five Lace Panels for Use on a Gown, c. 1900–1910, at the MoMu Fashion Museum in Antwerp', Costume,2022, Volume 56 Issue 1, Page 26-50, ISSN 0590-8876 |
Collection | |
Accession number | T.79:1 to 6-2013 |
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Record created | May 9, 2013 |
Record URL |
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