Fan
1800-1900 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
An attractive but optional accessory in the middle of the nineteenth century, fans such as this had become by 1890 an essential part of a fashionable wardrobe, and were made in a great range of shapes, sizes, materials and styles. The huge sleeves and flamboyant flowing lines of late nineteenth century fashionable dress were ideally matched by large dramatic fans. Ostrich feathers had become fashionable in the late eighteenth century, so much so that the species may have become extinct had it not been discovered in the 1830's that they could be successfully farmed. The sticks of this fan are made of tortoise shell, a material which was highly prized in the nineteenth century because of its beautiful appearance and durability. The tortoise shell usually came from the hawksbill turtle, which is now an endangered species. The shell was softened in boiling salted water before being moulded in heated dies.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Moulded hawksbill turtle shell, ostrich feathers (Struthio camelus) |
Brief description | 1800-1900, British, ostrich feather, hawksbill turtle shell |
Physical description | Large fan made of white ostrich feathers (Struthio camelus) and hawksbill turtle shell sticks. A length of cream grosgrain ribbon is tied through the carrying loop at the base of the sticks. |
Dimensions |
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Credit line | Given by Mrs Bertha Foley |
Object history | RF number is 1943/865. |
Summary | An attractive but optional accessory in the middle of the nineteenth century, fans such as this had become by 1890 an essential part of a fashionable wardrobe, and were made in a great range of shapes, sizes, materials and styles. The huge sleeves and flamboyant flowing lines of late nineteenth century fashionable dress were ideally matched by large dramatic fans. Ostrich feathers had become fashionable in the late eighteenth century, so much so that the species may have become extinct had it not been discovered in the 1830's that they could be successfully farmed. The sticks of this fan are made of tortoise shell, a material which was highly prized in the nineteenth century because of its beautiful appearance and durability. The tortoise shell usually came from the hawksbill turtle, which is now an endangered species. The shell was softened in boiling salted water before being moulded in heated dies. |
Collection | |
Accession number | T.19-1943 |
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Record created | June 24, 2009 |
Record URL |
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