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So far recollections has created 411 blog entries.

Ruffles – Gather for a No-Frills Discussion

By | March 29th, 2016|Categories: Fashion, Uncategorized, Victorian Era|Tags: , , , , , , |

by Donna Klein   From Bouillonné to Ruching - gather your ruffles!   Ruffles are more than a brand of potato chip. Ruffles have been embellishing and trimming garments for a very long time. There are a few ways to describe ruffles, each with its own nuanced meaning when it comes to design. Ruffles can [...]

Gloves – the Perfect Fashion Accessory

By | March 26th, 2016|Categories: Accessories, Fashion, Uncategorized, Victorian Era|Tags: , , , , , , , , |

by Donna Klein   Gloves - a Part of Fashion for Nearly One Thousand Years   Gloves have been used by humans for protection since antiquity. One legend relates that gloves have been a fashion statement among nobility since the 11th century when, according to The Evolution of the Glove, “the Doge of Venice, Domenico [...]

Mantle or Mantel? Mantelet? It’s all Cloak to Me

By | March 22nd, 2016|Categories: Civil War, Fashion, Uncategorized, Victorian Era|Tags: , , , , , |

by Donna Klein   Removing the Cloak from Mantle   Whether the word is spelled 'mantle' or 'mantel,' the origin is the same. According to the Online Etymology Dictionary, it comes from “Latin mantellum 'cloak'.” By the time it progressed to the Old English, it meant a 'loose, sleeveless cloak.' Whether you talk about a [...]

The Victorian Evolution of the Corsage

By | March 19th, 2016|Categories: Fashion, Uncategorized, Victorian Era|Tags: , , , |

by Donna Klein   The Corsage: Evolution from Body to Bodice to Bouquet   What do you think of when you hear the word “corsage?” Most likely you think of a single flower or a small bouquet or nosegay that is usually worn near the shoulder of a woman's dress or on the lapel of [...]

Dyes: from Nature to Aniline Part 2

By | March 15th, 2016|Categories: Textiles, Uncategorized|Tags: , , , , , , , , , |

by Donna Klein   How Aniline Dyes Changed Fashion   Thank a Scientist for Aniline   Aniline was first isolated from indigo in 1826 by Otto Unverdorben. It was given its name in 1840 by Julius Fritzsche when he distilled indigo into an oil using caustic potash. But, it was a long way from being [...]

Dyes: from Nature to Aniline Part 1

By | March 12th, 2016|Categories: Victorian Era|Tags: , , , , , , , |

by Donna Klein   Nature – the World's First Dyes   Before the advent of synthetic dye compounds such as those made from aniline, fabric color came solely from nature; plants, animals, and minerals. Humans have been using dyes to color fabric for more than 2,600 years; the earliest recorded use coming from China. Dyes [...]

Rose Bertin; French Minister of Fashion

By | March 4th, 2016|Categories: Fashion, Women's History|Tags: , , , , |

French Minister of Fashion While Charles Worth is considered the 'Father of Couture,' it all started with Rose Bertin, the French 'Minister of Fashion.' This was a name given to her by her detractors, but that is because she was a woman and she was powerful. She was ambitious and fashion was her ticket out [...]

Charles Frederick Worth, the Father of Couture

By | March 3rd, 2016|Categories: Fashion, Victorian Era|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , |

by Donna Klein   The Seeds of Couture   Charles Frederick Worth was born in 1825 in Bourne, England. He was the youngest of five children born to William and Ann Worth and only one of two children (he and his brother) who survived to adulthood. His father abandoned the family by the time Charles [...]

Lucile – Dressmaker to Fashion Icon

By | February 26th, 2016|Categories: Fashion, Uncategorized, Women's History|Tags: , , , , , , , , |

Lucy Grows into Lucile Lucy Christiana Sutherland was born in London in 1841. Her mother moved back to Ontario, Canada, after the death of her father. The family moved to the Isle of Jersey when her mother remarried. Lucy married James Stuart Wallace in 1884 and gave birth to a daughter, Esme, in 1885. The [...]