Tag Archives: Unveiled: 200 Years of Wedding Fashion

Unveiled: Wedding Dress of the Week

This week, as I walked around Unveiled with Wellington fashion designer Alexandra Owen who was prepping for her Thursday floor talk, she stopped in her tracks in front of this dress.

Monica Maurice’s wedding dress, 1938. Worn by Miss Monica Maurice and given by her family. Collection of the V&A.

The dress was worn by Monica Maurice for her wedding to Canadian doctor, Arthur Jackson (1904-1985) in South Yorkshire in 1938. It is made from fine silk gauze, and is accented with a blue petersham belt and buttons.

The spirited Monica Maurice on her wedding day. Collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum.

Of all the colours an English bride could choose, red is a particularly brave choice, and some would even say brazen given the racy associations of red in Western culture. However, red was one of Monica Maurice’s favourite colours, and she was not one to feel that she had to follow convention. In 1938 Monica married in red, made the decision to keep her maiden name, and became the first – and until 1978 only – woman member of the Association of Mining Electrical Engineers.Monica – who had studied languages and design at the Sorbonne, in Paris, and at Hamburg University in the late 1920s – worked for the Wolf Safety Lamp Company, a safety lighting engineering company owned by her father.  Her expertise in the area, and proficiency in languages, were such that in 1947,  she participated in a British intelligence overseas survey mission to Germany to ‘determine the extent and subsequent recovery in certain specialised industries’. She had the rank of lieutenant-colonel!

After her father’s death in 1951 she took over the company, and as her son recalls in his 1995 obituary was faced with restructuring and rebuilding ‘lost markets and demands’ in a post-war climate (while also raising three children).  Rebuild she did. Today, the company remains family owned and recognised as a world leader in ‘lighting for safe use in explosive atmospheres’. On 21 February 2012 the Museum of Sheffield opened an exhibition celebrating the company’s centenary.

While Monica operated astutely in a man’s world – she also had a passion for racing cars and flying – she accessorised her ‘steely determination’ with striking and stylish clothes. On seeing this dress Alexandra Owen marvelled at its contemporaneity, and the skill of the unknown dress-maker.

Alexandra noted that while similar dresses can be seen on the world’s runways today, very few exhibit the delicacy inherent in this dress. It is a characteristic she feels has come from time and effort spent on both the pattern making and the dress’ realisation, from the tucks at the shoulders to rolled hem.  She especially admired the hem which has been painstakingly hand rolled. Cut on the bias, the skirt hangs unevenly. Typically, skirts cut on the bias are left to hang overnight to develop a natural fall, and are then trimmed. Monica’s dressmaker, however, chose not to trim, which gives the dress an added joie de vivre.

The skirt, which has been cut on the bias falls unevenly but prettily.

While Monica’s dress-maker’s name has been lost from history, her skill is really to be admired.

‘Wedding Dress of the Week’ is posted in association with Unveiled: 200 Years of Wedding Fashion from the Victoria & Albert Museum, London which is on display at Te Papa until 22 April 2012.

Unveiled: Wedding Dress of the Week

This lilac satin dress from Te Papa’s collection was worn by Rosa Criscillo at her wedding to Antonino Moleta in Wellington on 5 May 1909. It is a dress that marked not only Rosa’s transition from a single woman to a wife, but heralded the beginning of a new life on the other side of the world.

Rosa Criscillo’s wedding dress from 1909. Maker unknown. Gift of Margaret Fulford, 2009. Te Papa. GH016409/1-2

This dress was made in Naples and brought to New Zealand by Rosa for her wedding day. Twenty three year old Rosa travelled from Stromboli, Italy, accompanied by her father and brother, to marry Antonino (Nino), a young farmer whom she had never met. Before she arrived, a proxy marriage was signed by Bishop Redwood in Wellington. The day she arrived, wearing this dress, the couple sealed their marriage at the Wellington Registry Office.

Antonino Moleta was also from the island of Stromboli. He and his brother Salvatore left Stromboli in 1898 seeking una buona fortuna – a good life. They followed a chain migration to Wellington, New Zealand, originally settling in Island Bay before heading to D’Urville Island in the Marlborough Sounds, to farm. When Salvatore passed away, Antonino was joined by another brother, Vincenzo. As the family legend goes, by 1908 Antonino and Vince had proved so successful that they decided it was time to marry and sent to Stromboli for brides. Rosa was accompanied to New Zealand by her 16 year old cousin, Angelina Criscillo, who was destined to be Vince’s bride. (Angelina’s life is dramatised in a book by her grandson, Gerard Hindmarsh.)

Rosa must have looked a vision as she stepped off the ship in her soft lilac gown, although she was no doubt somewhat hesitant about her future life at the end of the world.

The Italian made gown is representative of the fashion of the time. The bodice and skirt is made from a cotton silk satin, and is trimmed with ivory machine-made lace, ivory silk gimp and metallic sequins.

Detail of bodice

It has full-length, puffed sleeves, gathered at the forearm with cream lace cuffs.

The bodice has stays and is lined in warm pink cotton – a lovely surprise.

Interior of the bodice.

The skirt is gently flared with minimal decoration, except for a few lace appliquéd flowers. The inside hem is protected by a pink cotton strip with narrow brown edging.

Following Rosa’s death in 1958 the dress was looked after by her daughter, Maria Moleta and was gifted to Te Papa by Rosa’s grand daughter Margaret. Rosa and Antonino, who passed away in 1967, are buried together in the Karori Cemetary.

Wedding Dress of the Week is posted in association with the exhibition Unveiled: 200 Years of Wedding Dress from the Victoria and Albert Museum, London which is on display at Te Papa until 22 April 2012.

Unveiled: Wedding Dress of the Week

Zandra Rhodes is the first fashion designer I became aware of as a child. I think I must have been 10 or 12 when I saw a picture of her in a magazine. I was captivated by her pink hair. I had never imagined that grown-ups could look like her. Certainly none of the mums in my neighbourhood did. I was also drawn to her clothes – long, flowing and bright. When an aunt sent me a colourful chiffon ‘butterfly’ top from Fiji I was in heaven. I flitted about channelling Zandra and dreaming of the day I could have pink hair. As a grown-up I’ve never pursued the pink hair, but have remained a Zandra Rhodes fan. As such I was delighted to see her name on the list of designers for Unveiled: 200 Years of Wedding Dress from the Victoria and Albert Museum, London.

While Zandra Rhodes is renowned for her dynamic and skilled use of colour – musician Brian Eno speaks of her bringing ‘dashes’ of Matisse to the fashion world – the Zandra Rhodes wedding dress in Unveiled is an exercise is sublty. It is rendered in the palest of tones, white on white with a hint of creamy yellow. The dress, I think, is simply the prettiest in the exhibition.

Printed and pleated silk chiffon wedding dress designed by Zandra Rhodes for Elizabeth Weiner for her marriage to David Emanuel, 1976. Given by Elizabeth Emanuel. V&A: T.9:1 to 3-2006

‘Zandra’s hand-printed chiffon creations of the early seventies brought a sense of flawless etheral beauty to an era that was mostly saying short, youthful, hard-edged and sexy’.Gaby Longhi Chautin

In 1973 Rhodes launched ’73/44′ - a very feminine printed chiffon dress characterised by a deep V neck, full skirt and satin sash. She has reinterpreted this popular design throughout her career. Despite its more demure and rounded neckline, this wedding dress from 1976 bears many of the characteristics that made 73/44 a hit.

Invoking of a location far from London, Rhodes has printed the silk chiffon with a pattern of waves and fronded palms. She has cleverly reflected the  movement and structure of the latter in the structure of the dress - in the pleating of the bodice and skirt and the undulating frills around the waist.  Decorated with tiny pearls, and irrisdecent, tinted flowers and leaf shapes, the dress seems made for a sea nymph.

Detail of the bodice showing the pearl trimmed frill and iridescent flower and leaf shapes. Given by Elizabeth Emanuel. V&A: T.9:1 to 3-2006

Rhodes trained as a textile designer rather than a fashion designer. She studied at the Royal College of Art in the early 1960s. After graduating Rhodes worked as freelance textile designer. Concluding that no one worked as well with her prints as she did, she launched her first clothing collection in 1969 (fashion was in her blood – her mother had been a fitter at Worth and was a lecturer in fashion). Today, textile design remains Rhodes ‘metier first and foremost’.
The wedding dress was commissioned by another budding fashion designer, who at the time was studying as the Royal College of Art. Her name was Elizabeth Weiner. Her finance was fellow fashion student, David Emanuel, who chose a soft green suit to compliment his bride.

David and Elizabeth Emanuel on their wedding day. Photograph courtesy of Elizabeth Emanuel.

In 1981, the Emanuels shot to international fame, when they were chosen to design Lady Diana Spencer’s wedding gown for her marriage to Prince Charles. Elizabeth Emanuel is still designing, and recently represented England at Style Pasifika in Auckland during the 2011 Rugby World Cup celebrations.  She spoke to Breakfast TV while she was in New Zealand about designing for Lady Diana and about designing a Style Pasifika gown inspired by the All Blacks.

Unveiled: Wedding Dress of the Week

While in the mid-twentieth century many young women continued to pursue the dream of a white wedding, complete with a full-skirted Cinderella gown, Dawn ‘Velma’ Harris of Auckland was not amongst them. When she married James Turner on 27 May in 1961, she walked down the aisle of St Andrews Church in this eye-catching – and for some eye-brow raising – ensemble in glowing, yellow Thai silk.

Wedding outfit, 1961, New Zealand. Designed by Beverley Gordine. Gift of Mrs Velma Turner, 1986. Te Papa

Wedding outfit, 1961, New Zealand. Designed by Beverley Gordine. Gift of Mrs Velma Turner, 1986. Te Papa

The ensemble, which surprised some of Velma’s more conservative family members, is both dramatic and practical. The drama is provided by a removable over-skirt, the back of which forms a train.

The over-skirt forms a train at the back.

The practicality by the elegant and very wearable knee-length dress, suitable for After Five. For the wedding the two were seamlessly joined by a bead-encrusted belt with bow.

Wedding outfit, 1961, New Zealand. Gordine, Beverley. Gift of Mrs Velma Turner, 1986. Te Papa

The short dress revealed. Gift of Mrs Velma Turner, 1986. Te Papa

The ensemble, completed by a dainty custom-made crown and veil, was designed and constructed by Beverley Gordine, a close friend of Velma’s.

Beverley had begun her career as a dressmaker in Vulcan Lane, Auckland’s fashion quarter, in the 1930s. Although not formally trained, she had a flair for cutting and reproducing garments in the style of overseas fashions and was an excellent hand sewer. In particular she excelled at fine beadwork and the grafting of lace.

Stylish Velma teamed the dress with a pair of golden heels by Sbicca of California, which in keeping with the dress also featured a flourish of beads.

http://collections.tepapa.govt.nz/db_images/objimage.jpg?irn=111224&width=300&height=350

Shoes by Sbicca of California, 1961. Gift of Velma Turner.

Following the marriage service, the newly wed Mr and Mrs Turner and their guests adjourned to the Orchid Room, a popular venue in Mount Eden, for their reception. At some point in the proceedings, Velma slipped out of her wedding dress into her equally interesting ‘going-away dress’ (below), also designed by Beverley Gordine.

Going Away Dress, 1961, Auckland by Beverley Gordine. Gift of Mrs Velma Turner, 1986. Te Papa

Drawing on her talent, and patience, for handwork, Beverley adorned the collar and cuffs with intricate trails of rouleau. She also made rouleau loops for the rows of self-covered buttons.

Detail of Beverley Gordine’s rouleau work. Rouleau is derived from the French ‘roule’, meaning roll.

Velma’s wedding ensemble and going-away dress will be on display from Saturday 25 February opposite the exhibition New Zealand in Vogue on Level 4 of Te Papa. Velma Turner gifted both dresses, along with a copy of her wedding invitation and wedding portrait, to Te Papa in 1986.

‘Wedding Dress of the Week’ is posted in conjunction with the exhibition Unveiled: 200 years of the Wedding Fashion from the Victoria and Albert Museum, London which is on display at Te Papa until 22 April.

Unveiled: Wedding Dress of the Week

Many apologies for the lateness of this post. It was programmed to be published last Friday as I was fittingly in Dunedin for a wedding, but autopublish failed me!

This week’s wedding dress provides the inspiration for Maureen Montgomery’s forthcoming Te Papa lecture on The World of Charles Frederick Worth – Pioneer of Haute Couture.  (Sunday 12 February, 2012, 2-3pm Soundings Theatre).

Maureen is an Associate Professor at Canterbury University and the author of Gilded Prostitution: Status, Money and Transatlantic Marriages 1870-1920 (think Downton Abbey!) and Displaying Women: Spectacles of Leisure in Edith Wharton’s New York.

Cover of Displaying Women by Maureen Montgomery. Published 1998.

Her lecture is presented in conjunction with the exhibition Unveiled: 200 Years of Wedding Fashion from the Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Wedding dress designed by Charles Frederick Worth for Clara Mathews, 1879. Collection of the Victoria & Albert Museum, London. Given by Mrs G.T. Morton. ©Victoria and Albert Museum / V&A Images

The wedding dress in question was designed by Charles Frederick Worth (1825-1895) for Clara Mathews who married Colonel Hugh Stafford in 1880 and is in the V&A’s collection.

Worth, who was born in the small market town in Lincolnshire, England in 1825, is credited with founding the French haute couture industry, and most importantly ‘raising the status of dress making from an anonymous trade to artistic endeavour’.

‘His superior skills, business acumen and cultivated air of exclusivity afforded him a status hitherto unseen in the fashion industry’. (Mairi Mackenzie)

Within the chronology of Unveiled, Clara Mathews’ dress is the first by an identified designer. Prior to Worth, dressmakers occupied a  lowly status within the fashion and textile industry. The cost of a dress lay not in the making, but in the fabric and trimmings. Worth, who aspired to make clothes that were ’the most expensive in the world’, created an air of exclusivity around his work and through force of personality and sheer talent,  cultivated a highly influential clientele, the most important of whom was the Empress Eugenie.

A fashion icon of her generation, details of the empress’ gowns were reported in newspapers around the world. Titled and wealthy women from Paris to London to New York clamoured to wear his designs, and in comparison to the poorly paid dressmakers before him, they paid between 1,600 and 120,000 francs for the privilege. He was particularly popular among American heiresses, who travelled to Europe in increasing numbers following the end of the Civil War. At Worth they purchased their trousseau along with gowns and status. In the 1860s Worth began to export gowns to the US. The significance of Worth to Americans is immortalised in the novels of Henry James and Edith Wharton.

Clara Mathews was not amongst the most famous of Worth’s American born clients, but has an interesting story.  She was the illegitimate daughter of another man synonymous with the advancement of the dress making – Isaac Merritt Singer, founder of the Singer Sewing Machine Company. In his private life, Singer was a bit of a Lothario. By 1860, he had fathered a grand total of eighteen children by four different women amidst accusations of bigamy. There was Catherine, followed by the three Mary’s - Mary Ann, Mary McGonical and Mary Eastwood Walters. By the end of his life, he is said to have fathered 24 children.

Clara Matthews was the daughter Mary McGonical, who bore Singer five children. The Singer-McGonical offspring used the surname Mathews. Clara was  about 25 when she wed her English Colonel. At the time, her corseted waist was a mere 57.5 cm in circumference.

Like last week’s wedding dress, Clara’s gown is an effective combination of austerity and luxury. The high-necked bodice, which is made from a cream silk satin and fastened with pearls, is chaste and verging on the severe in appearance.  Worth saved all his extravagant flourishes for the skirt, which has a flat front and sweep of drapery at the back. The skirt features net panels densely embroidered with faux pearls and satin stitch in a design of leaves, buds, three-dimensional flowers.  Faux pearls were the latest in fashionable trimmings.  

Clara was not the only Singer family member to frequent the House of Worth. The evening dress below, also from the V&A’s collection, was worn by Mrs Granville Alexander, another of Singer’s daughters. The richly embroidered dress dates  from 1881. Both gowns were donated to the V&A by Mrs G.T Morton, Mrs Alexander’s great-niece.

Evening dress by Worth, 1881. Collection of the V&A, London. Given by Mrs G. T. Morton. ©Victoria and Albert Museum / V&A Images

For further information on Clara’s wedding dress listen to a  podcast by Edwina Ehrman, the curator of Unveiled. To see more images of Worth’s spectacular gowns visit the V&A and Metropolitan Museum of Art websites. If you are in Wellington on Sunday 12 February, we hope to see you at Maureen’s lecture.

‘Wedding Dress of the Week’ is posted in conjunction with the exhibition Unveiled: 200 years of the Wedding Fashion from the Victoria and Albert Museum, London which is on display at Te Papa until 22 April.

Unveiled: Wedding Dress of the Week

One of my most favourite fashion terms is passementerie. Its a French term that looks and sounds good, and which economically describes a luxurious array of frivolities used to adorn dress and interiors, including pom poms, bobbles, braid, ribbon, fringing, buttons, tassels and gimp. The English equivalent is the equally delightful ‘haberdashery’. 

This week’s Wedding Dress is a celebration of passementarie. It is from Te Papa’s collection. 

Wedding Dress, circa 1890, Greymouth. Gift of Vivienne Robertson, 1982. Te Papa

Wedding Dress, c. 1909, Greymouth. Gift of Vivienne Robertson, 1982. Te Papa

Passementerie trimmings became very fashionable in dress in the middle of the 19th century. As fashion historian Lucy Johnston comments trimmings came to be used to such an extent that  ’fashionable women must have looked very much at home surrounded by tasselled valances and chairs embellished with fringe’.

Made from a heavy silk satin, our ‘Wedding Dress of the Week’ was worn by Christina Thomson who married Charles Haglund in 1909. They married in the gold-mining town of Kumara, on the South Island’s West Coast. Charles’s father, John, was a Swedish immigrant who ‘came to the coast in the sixties and followed the gold rushes all over the district’. According to the Grey River Argus, John ‘met with his fair share of luck’ and was held in esteem by ‘all who knew him’. While we currently don’t know much about Charles and Christina’s life, we do know that geographical isolation did not prevent Christina from having a spectacular dress for her wedding. The bodice is a confection of lace, braid, cord and bobbles, and the sheen of the silk is dazzling.  

Detail of pin tucks
Detail of the bodice.

As well as passementerie, the bodice features rows of pin tucks front and back. In contrast to the vertical rows of tucks, the sleeves are horizontally pleated, with each pleat accentuated by a button.  

Detail of the sleeve

 
The tucks, pleats and layers of passementerie work in unison to play capture the light and the eye.  It would have looked dazzling in candle light.

Detail of the passementerie and silk bow at the waist.

 
In  comparison to the bodice, the skirt, which comprises nine gores,  is unadorned except for a pleated lace ruffle at hem. Despite being unadorned, the skirt  could never be described as ‘plain’. The sheen and weight of the fabric give it a sculptural presence, its smoothness working to accentuate the bodice.
Wedding dress

Back view

 
 Wedding Dress of the Week is posted in conjunction with the exhibition Unveiled: 200 years of the Wedding Fashion from the Victoria and Albert Museum, London which is on display at Te Papa until 22 April.
 

Unveiled events programme kicks off!

Following the holiday period, Te Papa is getting into full swing for 2012. The lifts are crammed, the phones are ringing, emails are flying and meeting requests are flooding in.  Best of all, it also means that the 2012 Events Programme for Unveiled: 200 Years of Wedding Fashion from the Victoria & Albert Museum, London is about to take off. The programme comprises of floortalks, lectures, fashion shows and even a Conservation Clinic, all designed to enhance the Unveiled experience.

From February onwards, we will be offering lunchtime floor talks every Tuesday and Thursday at 12.15. On Tuesdays you’ll be guided by a Te Papa curator, and on Thursdays a well-known fashion figure will give their personal take on the exhibition. The following fashionistas will be your tour guides throughout February.

February 2: fashion stylist Sally-ann Moffat

February 9: fashion editor Carolyn Enting           

February 16: designer Jane Yeh

February 23: milliner Amanda Nicolle

If you would like to book into either a Tuesday or Thursday floortalk email floortalks@tepapa.govt.nz  Admission charges apply.

February also sees the launch of the Unveiled Lecture Programme, admission to which is free. It starts on Sunday 12 February at 2pm with an intriguing journey into the glamorous World of Charles Frederick Worth – Pioneer of Haute Couture with Maureen Montgomery from Canterbury University.

Clara Mathews' wedding dress by Charles Frederick Worth, 1879. Collection of V&A. Given by Mrs G.T. Morton.

Clara Mathews' wedding dress by Charles Frederick Worth, 1879. Collection of V&A. Given by Mrs G.T. Morton.

One of the most spectacular gowns on display in Unveiled is a wedding dress made for the American Clara Mathews by the Paris couturier Charles Frederick Worth (left). 

In the latter half of the 19th century, a visit to Worth’s rooms at 7, Rue de la Paix had become compulsory for wealthy Americans visiting Europe. His gowns spoke of style, taste, and money at a time when display and appearances were everything. 

Guest lecturer Maureen Montgomery invites you to glimpse Worth’s world through the eyes of his high-society American devotees. Come along to find out why these women were his best customers – ‘better than queens’. 

Maureen Montgomery is an associate professor in the School of Humanities at the University of Canterbury. She is author of two books on women in US high society in the late 19th and early 20th centuries: Gilded Prostitution: Status, Money and Transatlantic Marriages 1870-1920 and Displaying Women: Spectacles of Leisure in Edith Wharton’s New York

Sunday 12 February, 2012, 2-3pm Soundings Theatre, FREE entry

Other lectures include:

18 March: Modern Bride – Vinka Lukas’s Wedding Empire with Lucy Hammonds

 15 April: War Brides’ Weddings – When Clothing Coupons Dictated Fashion with Dr Gabrielle Fortune

Unveiled: Wedding Dress of the Week

This week’s ‘wedding dress of the week’ is an homage to classicism. Designed by Ian & Marcel this dress and coat is one of the most subtle yet rewarding ensembles included in Unveiled: 200 Years of Wedding Fashion from the Victoria & Albert Museum, London.

Pleated silk wedding dress and coat, net veil decorated with silicone rubber, by Ian and Marcel, London, 1989. Bequeathed by Ian and Marcel. ©Victoria and Albert Museum / V&A Images

Pleated silk wedding dress and coat, net veil decorated with silicone rubber, by Ian and Marcel, London, 1989. Bequeathed by Ian and Marcel. ©Victoria and Albert Museum / V&A Images

Ian & Marcel was founded in 1979 by two Canadians – Ian Cooper and Marcel Aucoin. Both trained in Canada, and moved to London in the late 1970s, where Cooper completed a masters degree in fashion at the St Martins School of Art. In the UK, the duo quickly established a reputation for their exquisitely hand-painted garments, and pleated silks. The latter were inspired by the work of Mariano Fortuny (1871 – 1949). Born in Spain and based in Venice, Fortuny was renowned for his ‘Delphos’ dress, a full-length, body clinging gown made of finely pleated silk which was weighted at the hem and sleeves with Venetian glass beads. The beads not only added an ornamental touch, but also assisted with the drape of the gown.

As the name Delphos suggests, Fortuny was inspired by the Classical world as alluded to in this photograph from The Metropolitan.

Evening dress by House of Fortuny, 1930s. Gift of Estate of Agnes Miles Carpenter, 1958. Collection of the Costume Institute, Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY. C.I.58.61.3a, b.

Evening dress by House of Fortuny, 1930s. Gift of Estate of Agnes Miles Carpenter, 1958. Collection of the Costume Institute, Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY. C.I.58.61.3a, b.

Influenced by neo-classicism and the 19th century dress reform movement, Fortuny’s Delphos gown was initially popular in artistic circles. Early adopters included dancer Isadora Duncan and actress Lillian Gish. Over-time the Delphos became acceptable as ‘at-home’ wear and later as evening wear.

Cooper and Aucoin saw an exhibition of Fortuny’s work in 1980 at the Brighton Museum and Art Gallery. Obviously entranced, they skilfully updated the Fortuny-look for the 1980s silhouette as this wedding dress elegantly demonstrates.

The execution of the veil, which features roses ‘drawn’ in silicone rubber,  also brings Ian & Marcel’s historically inspired wedding gown into the contemporary. The duo developed a silicone rubber and silk technique to create stitch-free seams and hems, and decorative elements.

Pleated silk and silk net with rubber decoration by Ian and Marcel. ©Victoria and Albert Museum / V&A Images

Pleated silk and silk net with silicone rubber decoration by Ian and Marcel. ©Victoria and Albert Museum / V&A Images

Another example of this technique, applied to an evening gown, can be viewed on the V&A’s website. 

Ian & Marcel bequeathed a significant collection of their work to the Victoria and Albert Museum in 1992. Both designers sadly succumbed to AIDS related illnesses in the early 1990s. Reflecting on their approach, Lady Holly Rumbold, who co-wrote Ian and Marcel : Hand Painted and Pleated Silks with Elizabeth Vernon in 1993, wistfully observed:

‘Ian & Marcel reminded us of medieval knights, whose quest was for beauty’s perfection. They consecrated their lives to their art and the realisation of their ideals, with the same single-mindedness and fervour of Parsifal in pursuit of the Holy Grail’.

Unveiled: Wedding Dress of the Week

This week’s wedding dress is a recent acquisition – one which caused much excitment amongst Te Papa’s History team when it arrived. Wholly romantic in design, this dress is made from a Second World War silk parachute. It was made for Carol Gifford by members of her family, for her marriage to Owen Thomas on 8 August 1946 at St Andrew’s Presbyterian Church in New Plymouth.

Wedding dress, 1946, New Zealand. Gifford Family. Gift of the Thomas Family, 2011. Te Papa

Silk parachute wedding dress, 1946, New Zealand. Gifford Family. Gift of the Thomas Family, 2011. Te Papa

Owen Thomas was discharged from the New Zealand Army in 1946. He brought the parachute back from the Pacific where he had been posted. During the war, silk was a rare and much sought after commodity. Japan – an ally of Germany and Italy since 1939 – was the world’s foremost supplier of raw-silk. Needless to say, the war severely interrupted its supply. In the immediate post-war period, fabric for new clothing, including silk, remained scarce. As such salvaged parachutes, which included approximately 65 metres of fabric, were prized. Not only did a parachute provide  dressmaker with ample fabric to utilise – the gown’s sweeping full skirt flaunts war-time fabric restrictions - it also enabled a bride to honour the war service of her husband-to-be.

Maker’s often incorporated integral elements of the parachute’s manufacture into the design of the garment. In the wedding dress below from the Smithsonian Collection, the ingenious bride, Ruth Hensinger, used the parachute’s the cords and cord casings to ruche the skirt, and cordless casings to form decorative band around bottom of skirt. Ruth married Major Claude Hensinger, a B-29 pilot in World War II who escaped his burning plane by parachute. You can read their story on the Smithsonian’s website.

Parachute silk wedding dress, 1947. Collection of the Smithsonian - National Museum of American History. Gift of Claude E. and Ruth L. Hensinger.

Parachute silk wedding dress, 1947. Collection of the Smithsonian - National Museum of American History. Gift of Claude E. and Ruth L. Hensinger.

Josephine Gale, the maker of this hand-stitched petticoat from Te Papa’s collection, also utilised aspects of the parachute’s manufacture. The bodice features the ‘zigzag’ seam from the parachute’s canopy. 

Petticoat, 1946, New Zealand. Gale, Josephine. Gift of the Gale Family, 2010. Te Papa

Parachute nyon petticoat, 1946, New Zealand. Made by Josephine Gale. Gift of the Gale Family, 2010. Te Papa

The petticoat, which was made by Josephine for her wedding trousseau, is made from a number of inset pieces, indicating that every available piece of fabric was precious and of use. Josephine married Flight Lieutenant David Gale of the RNZAF on 3 September 1946.

Following their wedding, Carol and Owen Thomas continued to make the most of their unexpected gift of silk. Part of the wedding gown’s sleeves were incorporated into christening gowns, illustrating the ongoing value of the parachute silk and associated memories to the family.

Carol Thomas (nee Gifford) wearing her parachute silk and lace wedding dress, 1946. Photographer unknown. Gift of the Thomas Family, 2011, Te Papa.
Carol Thomas (nee Gifford) wearing her parachute silk and lace wedding dress, 1946. Photographer unknown. Gift of the Thomas Family, 2011, Te Papa.

Wedding Dress of the Week is posted in association with  UNVEILED: 200 YEARS OF WEDDING FASHION FROM THE VICTORIA AND ALBERT MUSEUM, LONDON

 

Unveiled: Wedding Dress of the Week

Wedding dress by Charles James for Baba Beaton, 1934

The Parisian fashion designer Madeleine Vionnet (1876 – 1975) is credited with having invented the bias cut. She commented: ‘Maybe because everyone else made dresses that flowed in the same direction, I saw that if I turned the fabric on an angle… it gained elasticity’.

Elasticity is something that this silk satin gown by Charles James (1906 -1978) certainly needs. The wedding gown, which looks as it has been poured onto its mannequin, has no fastenings of any real meaning – not a zip, not a button, not a dome, just a hook and loop at the neck. Created in 1934, it is an early example of the Anglo-American designer’s work.  James, who opened premises in London in 1929, was to become renowned for his complex approach to cut and drape.  

Silk satin wedding dress by Charles James, London, 1934. Wax orange blossom choker. Worn by Baba (Barbara) Beaton for her marriage to Alec Hambro on 6 November 1934.Given by Mrs. Alec Hambro

Silk satin wedding dress by Charles James, London, 1934. Wax orange blossom choker. Worn by Baba (Barbara) Beaton for her marriage to Alec Hambro on 6 November 1934.Given by Mrs. Alec Hambro

While the gown, which was worn by Barbara ‘Baba’ Beaton on the occasion of her marriage to Alec Hambro, gives the appearance of simplicity, its construction is clever and complex. It is elaborately seamed and darted, especially at the back.  James commented ’all my seams have meaning – they emphasise something about the body’.

Detail of the back darts and seams.

Detail of the back darts and seams.

James has cleverly used the seams and darts to mould the dress to the body while also creating an abstract and pleasing pattern. The darts shown in the detail above, originate from the bust, embrace the waist and artfully shape the hips. James aimed to celebrate the female figure, and in this dress he caresses it with seams. In the muslin toile below, which dates from 1947, he again defines the waist and hip with dynamic seams.

Half sewn muslin for Charles James' 'Ribbon' dress, 1947. Brooklyn Museum Costume Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; Gift of Millicent Huttleston Rogers, 1949

Half sewn muslin for Charles James' 'Ribbon' dress, 1947. Brooklyn Museum Costume Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; Gift of Millicent Huttleston Rogers, 1949

The image of the toile and the sketch below, are from the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s online datebase. The Met holds an extraordinary collection of finished dresses, sewn muslins or toiles, flat patterns and sketches by James that show his complex design process from beginning to end. For those interested in the intricacies of his designs it is well worth investigating.

Sketch by Charles James, 1942. Brooklyn Museum Costume Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; Gift of Mrs. Clive Runnels and Mrs. Edward L. Ryerson, 1957

Sketch by Charles James, 1942. Brooklyn Museum Costume Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; Gift of Mrs. Clive Runnels and Mrs. Edward L. Ryerson, 1957

 
While Charles James gown for Baba Beaton was very contemporary, her bridesmaid wore a red velvet bustle dress, and the page boys wore Elizabethan ruffs, red velvet jackets and white satin breeches. The wedding was stage-managed by Baba Beaton’s brother, society photographer Cecil Beaton, who ensured that it was a theatrical affair. The ‘Medieval Wedding’ was captured on film by British Pathe. The wedding dress is one of two satin gowns commissioned by Baba Beaton in 1934. She also commissioned an evening gown.
 

Baba Beaton’s dress by Charles James is one of the stars of Unveiled: 200 Years of Wedding Fashion from the Victoria and Albert Museum, London and is on display at Te Papa until 22 April.  

 

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