Detail of Geological Plan of the Port of San Francisco (1839) from Beechey’s Voyage - BibliOdyssey
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Detail of Geological Plan of the Port of San Francisco (1839) from Beechey’s Voyage - BibliOdyssey
Crinoline c. 1865 (via the Kyoto Costume Institute Archive)
‘…In the early 1840s, the crinoline petticoat was developed, originally made of linen and interwoven with horsehair (“crin” in French) to provide enough stiffness for a single petticoat to easily swell out a skirt. In the second half of the 1850s, a cage crinoline was patented that linked together a series of horizontal hoops made out of wire or whalebone. Further progress led to the use of steel hoops, resulting in crinolines that were lightweight and easy to put on or take off. This development led to a sudden trend for massive skirts, which reached their maximum size in the 1860s.’
This dress was remade from a Japanese kimono in London.
Dress: 1870s from the Kyoto Costume Institute Archive
Brand: Turner Label: MISSES TURNER COURT DRESS MAKERS 151 STREET
Material: White kimono fabric of figured “shibori” silk satin; embroidery of wisteria, chrysanthemum, peony, and Chinese fan motifs in metallic threads; wrapped buttons with Japanese “tomoemon”-like motif on bodice (only bodice and overskirt sur
The Solar System. Theory of the Seasons.
from: ’General Atlas Of The World: Containing Upwards Of Seventy Maps. Engraved On Steel, In The First Style Of Art, By Sidney Hall, William Hughes, F.R.G.S., &c. New Edition.