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#1820s fashion
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Two dresses. 1812–14 / c. 1820. British. Met Museum.
I love the yellow of the 1814 dress so much!
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daguerreotyping · 9 months
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Fashion plate of a redingote (frock coat) design featuring big bold lapels and a slutty waistcoat window, La Mode, c. 1820s
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threadtalk · 1 year
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Silk gauze alert! And the 1820s. And stripes! You probably know this about me by now, but I adore Regency and Long Regency style clothing, and the 1820s are among my favorites. You can see the waist here starting to slowly creep down, so it isn't quite so high as the decade before.
This particular dress has a bit of staining, but that's not surprising given the material. Silk gauze is extremely fragile, and this particular version has a feather motif woven into it as well.
The braided bottom and embellishments on the bodice and sleeves are made of silk satin and are called rouleaux. This is very common in gowns from the 1820s and 1830s, adding a fascinating almost sculptural aspect to the gowns.
I also adore the color here, that sweet gentle green that speaks of spring. From the Maryland Center for Humanities.
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artist-ellen · 1 year
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Kaeya
One of the best Monstadt characters we meet early on in game is Kaeya. Our Calvary Captain with tragic backstories and a habit of vanishing and reappearing in suspicious ways. When looking at his game-outfit I was reminded of dandies in the 1820s-1830s and once it was seen I couldn't unsee it. I kept his fingerless gloves though and banished his cravat. I have it on good authority that the "window" is very plot-relevant.
I am the artist!!! Don’t repost without permission & credit! Thank you! Come visit me over on: instagram.com/ellenartistic or tiktok: ellenartistic
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paletapessoal · 1 month
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Wool and cotton pelisse, ca. 1810-1820
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araiz-zaria · 1 month
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DUEL ME AT DENNY'S IHOP! 😤🔥🌊
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❌ FIGHT DUEL ME AT DENNY'S PARKING LOT!!!
✅ DUEL ME AT IHOP!!!1!!1!
James Barron totally said this y'all 🤪💀
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I just found out recently that not much of the Bladensburg's Duelling Fields was preserved, so today the site where Stephen Decatur duelled James Barron was bordered by a cemetery and...an IHOP.
😅😅🥴🙃🥴
(so yeah, I reckon why not draw this 🤪🤪)
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Meanwhile this was what their seconds were doing:
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(Decatur's second William Bainbridge to the left, Barron's second Jesse Elliott on the right)
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gogmstuff · 1 year
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ca. 1828 Paulína von Lebzeltern by Konstantin Danil (Galéria mesta Bratislavy - Bratislava-Staré Mesto, Slovakia). From tumblr.com/history-of-fashion, Her bodice has fan-like pleats.
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tidvis-games · 1 year
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I just love the regency period, so obviously I had to make my own Regency dress!
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dress hemlines, 1825
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Dinner dress. 1824-26. British. The Met Museum.
I love the detail of the embroidery.
It's finally December, nothing can stop me from posting Christmas stuff now
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klaustopia · 1 year
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I KNOW SIS I JUST KNOW…
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threadtalk · 1 year
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Transitional gown alert! By now, you may have figured out some of my personal quirks in terms of dresses that get me excited, and this 1821 piece from the Museum at FIT has two of them: bold prints and transitional style!
First, the print. It’s one of my missions in life to show modern audiences that the past was not drab, beige, and boring. Nor was it universally gauzy and ethereal. People love color, and once block printing became widely available to Western audiences (and no longer considered pagan and scandalous) amazing zigzag patterns like this one, and many others, became wildly popular. Through most of the 19th century, in fact, you can find these, often Indian influenced (read: mostly appropriated, which is a whole other tale in and of itself).
Now, transition! It’s got a silhouette that’s influenced by the 1810s, with the higher waist and the trim skirt. I'd even argue that the collar takes inspiration from the classic Spencer jacket. However, it’s beginning to show all the signs of the impending wild 1830s, what with those sleeves, trim, and Romantic flourishes. I’d also argue that the waistline is starting to creep downward a bit here, too.
Fashion is rarely a straight line. It’s a zigzag!
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333alyx · 1 year
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y'all...
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duchess-of-lara · 2 years
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Baron François Pierre Gérard, Hortense de Beauharnais, Queen of Holland (1783-1837), c.1820.
From ~ The Age of Napoleon: Costume from Revolution to Empire, 1789-1815.
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