Fashion Design
1938 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Pink dress and train entirely covered in self fabric ruffles and frills. Design for a modern Court dress.
1 of 4863 fashion designs mounted in 48 volumes.
1 of 4863 fashion designs mounted in 48 volumes.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Pencil, pen and ink, and watercolour |
Brief description | Madame Handley-Seymour. Pink dress and train entirely covered in self fabric ruffles and frills. Design for modern Court dress. London, 1938. One of 4863 fashion designs bound in one of 48 volumes. |
Physical description | Pink dress and train entirely covered in self fabric ruffles and frills. Design for a modern Court dress. 1 of 4863 fashion designs mounted in 48 volumes. |
Dimensions |
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Credit line | Given by Mrs. Joyce Whitehouse |
Object history | Elizabeth Handley Seymour, née Elizabeth Fielding, (1867-1948) was a court-dressmaker whose atelier was based at 47 New Bond Street. She designed gowns for the Court and Society during the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s, most famously the wedding dress for the Duchess of York (later Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother) and later, her Coronation dress. These volumes of fashion designs were donated by Elizabeth's daughter, Mrs. Joyce Whitehouse in 1958. These sketches would have been shown to prospective clients and also sent out to customers for approval, with a charge made upon the customer if the sketches were not returned within a few days' time. When Elizabeth died in 1948 she had been married for 47 years to Major James Burke Handley-Seymour, so she must have been born c.1881 and married 1901. There is an Elizabeth Fielding identifying herself as a court dressmaker in the 1901 census (RG 13/83 f15 p19), aged 28,which would suggest a credible birth date of 1873 if it is the same Elizabeth Fielding. - Daniel Milford-Cottam (July 2012) Elizabeth Handley-Seymour's great-nephew contacted the Museum in April 2016 with biographical details on his great-aunt to clarify her history. She was born in Blackpool , Lancashire, in 1867, and moved to London during the 1890s. While she appears in the 1881 and 1891 cenusus records for Blackpool with the correct ages of 13 and 23; the 5 year discrepancy in her age on the 1901 census is perhaps explained by the fact that she was rather older than James Handley-Seymour, who she married that same year. - Daniel Milford-Cottam, 15/04/2016 |
Bibliographic reference | Victoria and Albert Museum Department of Prints and Drawings and Department of Paintings Accessions 1957-1958 London: HMSO, 1964 |
Collection | |
Accession number | E.4735-1958 |
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Record created | June 30, 2009 |
Record URL |
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