Evening Dress
c. 1902
American
Kent State University Museum

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Evening Dress
c. 1902
American
Kent State University Museum
Blue Silk Dress with Chiffon
1900s
Sörmland Museum
Gabriele Münter, “Three women, Marshall, Texas,” ca. June 19, 1900, printed 2006/’07. Credit Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/VG Bild - Kunst, Bonn; via The Gabriele Münter and Johannes Eichner Foundation, Munich and Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, New York
Gabriele Münter, “Three women, Marshall, Texas,” ca. June 19, 1900, #OnThisDay printed 2006/’07. Credit Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/VG Bild - Kunst, Bonn; via The Gabriele Münter and Johannes Eichner Foundation, Munich and Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, New York
more about the photographer: Gabriele Münter (1877-1962)
Gabriele Münter (1877-1962) was a German expressionist painter who was at the forefront of the Munich avant-garde in the early 20th century.
Gabriele Münter (19 Feb 1877 – 19 May 1962) was a #German expressionist painter who was at the forefront of the Munich avant-garde in the early 20th century. She was a founding member of the expressionist group Der Blaue Reiter. via W
Juneteenth, officially #Juneteenth National Independence Day, is a federal holiday in the United States. It is celebrated annually on June 19 to commemorate the end of slavery in the United States. The holiday's name, first used in the 1890s, is a portmanteau of June and nineteenth, referring to June 19, 1865, the day when Major General Gordon Granger ordered the final enforcement of the Emancipation Proclamation in Texas at the end of the American Civil War. via W
#womenphotographers #PalianSHOW #art #artbywomen
A series of Juneteenth celebratory wagons in the early 1900s, in Houston, Austin and Corpus Christi.
A Guide to Common Regency-Era Nicknames
These nicknames are the result of a three month survey I conducted using hundreds of primary sources ranging from newspapers to period literature to murder trial testimony. I have been sitting on this research for two years due to several names I was stuck on, but when I mentioned to project in a response to an ask recently I had several people encourage me to just post it as is - so here you go...
Due to the strict social rules of the Regency era, nicknames were very rarely used in the upper classes outside of family and very close friends.
Young, unmarried women would sometimes go by a nickname publicly, but even then the rules of formal address still applied. A young woman of status would be introduced as Miss Betsey Lastname, not just Betsey. The eldest daughter would be introduced as Miss Lastname, whether or not she went by a nickname.
The same rules applied to children of a certain status that went by nicknames. Servants would refer to their young charges as Miss Sally and Master Jemmy - not just Sally and Jemmy.
Adults who went by nicknames outside of close family/friends tended to be servants (free, indentured and enslaved) or members of the lower class. A scullery maid was more likely to be a Fanny than a Frances and a stable boy was more likely to be a Jack than a John.
You do also see men in positions of authority referred to by nicknames in a "man of the people" type way - hence Ben Franklin, Sam Adams, etc.
However, this was also often used in a sarcastic manner by political opposition.
A few notes on the lists below...
Nicknames were often very regionally specific. Names with locations in parentheses were used primarily in those areas, those without locations I've found evidence of use throughout the English-speaking world.
Nicknames are listed in very rough order of popularity, starting with the most popular - (I did not actually count the hundreds of occurrences of each nickname as the sources I used were very hard to quantify, so these are based on my general observations during the project and should not be taken as academic fact.)
A general rule - Y not IE endings unless you are Scottish.
Lizzy not Lizzie, Sophy not Sophie, Charley not Charlie
IE endings were still associated with French names
Women's Names
Amelia - Am(e)y, Emily
Ann - Nancy, Nan, Nanny (northern England), Annie (Scotland)
Bridget - Biddy
Caroline - Car(r)y
Catherine - Kitty, Kate, Cat(e)y (US), Catty (Ireland), Katty (Scotland/Ireland), Katie (Scotland)
Charlotte - [see notes]*
Dorothy - Doll(y)
Eleanor - Nell(y)
Elizabeth - Bets(e)y, Eliza, Betty, Lizzy, Bess(y), Els(e)y/Elsie (Scotland/US) - NOT Beth
Frances - Fanny, Fan, Franny
Henrietta - Harriet, Hetty, Henny
Isabella - Bell(a), Tibby (Northern England/Scotland)
Jane - Jenny, Jessy/Jessie (Scotland)
Louisa/Lucy - Loo/Lou
Margaret - Peggy, Peg, (Maggy, Meggy, Moggy, Madge (Scotland))
Martha - Patty, Matty (northern England/Scotland/Ireland/US), Patsy (southern US)
Mary - Polly, Mally (northern England/Scotland), Molly (Lancashire), Pally (Yorkshire)
Rebecca - Becky, Becca
Sarah - Sally
Sophia - Sophy
Susannah - Susan, Sukey, Susy, Suckey (southern US)
Men's Names
Alexander - Allick/Ellick, Sandy - NOT Alex#
Anthony - Tony
Benjamin - Ben(ny)
Charles - Charley, Charlie (Scotland)
Edward - Ned(dy), Ted(dy) (Ireland)
Francis - Frank(y)
George - Georgey, Geordie (Northern England/Scotland)
Henry - Harry
James - Jem(my), Jamie (Scotland), Jim(my)$
John - Jack(y), Johnny, Jock(ey) (Scotland)
Joseph - Joe(y)
Richard - Dick(y)
Robert - Bob(by), Robb(y/ie) (Scotland), Robin
Samuel - Sam(my)
Thomas - Tom(my)
William - Bill(y), Will(y)
* I have found a single instance of both Lotty (in a dictionary from 1725) and Charley (a murder trial from 1735) being used as a nickname for Charlotte in the early 18th century, but none from the Regency period itself. So both nicknames pre-date the Regency era, but I, as of yet, cannot prove whether they were in use during the early 19th century or not. # "Alex." was used in the Regency era as an abbreviation for Alexander, but I have never seen it used in a period source as stand-alone nickname. Alexander Hamilton would occasionally sign his name "Alex Hamilton" without the period, but he also didn't use a period when he signed it "A Hamilton". It is possible it was also a spoken nickname at the time, however I have not come across any hard evidence of this pre-dating the 20th Century. $ Jim/Jimmy did exist as a nickname in the early 19th century, but was far, FAR, less common than Jem/Jemmy. It would not overtake Jem/Jemmy in popularity until the mid-19th century.
1920s Gladys Bentley, owner of the Harlem gay bar the Clam House. From Pinterest.
1927 Kodak Petite Cameras. From Art Deco 1920, FB.
Wow, apparently the bellows were also colored to match the housing, and they came with accessories like matching compacts.
found what they look like with the bellows open!!
credit u/deepsky_wonders on reddit
Mourning rings, England (1785), Victoria & Albert Museum
1929 Dodge Brothers Senior Coupe ad. From America in the 1920s, FB.
1926 Alice Brady starring in the Broadway play "Sour Grapes", photographed by Edward Steichen. From Pinterest.
Evening dress of blue silk damask and pearls (1860s) at the Gothenburg City Museum.
Hot Damn that is downright Sexy to watch
Me, about halfway through the video: "Oh, holy shit, this is so coo- IS THAT ON FIRE?"
Biker flappers on the beach! Mid-1920s
Exquisite styling of a bridal party by James Van Der Zee, 1920s.
Circa 1926-30 is my best guess.
1925 Madison Belmont Building at 183 Madison Avenue, completed in 1925. It was designed by the architectural firm Warren and Wetmore. It is notable for the iron and bronze metal work on the first three floors created by Edgar Brandt. The metal work may be the first use of Art Deco style on a United States building! FB.
16-page zine about a long-term interest of mine, atmospheric diving suits. I love these underwater "robots" and their strange & varied histories
Link to the CyberneticZoo source mentioned by OP
The tailors at Colonial Williamsburg made a suit for their cat
The best part is that they were inspired by a diary entry from 1775, written by a 12 year old tailor’s apprentice who had been left unsupervised all day and decided to make a suit for a cat. Here’s a link to the blog post about it, but I’ll just paste the whole diary entry here:
“I had been at work about two months when Christmas came on – and here I must relate a little anecdote. The principal [the tailor] and his lady were invited to a party among their friends…while it devolved on me to stay at home and keep house. There was nothing left me in charge to do, only to take care of the house. There was a large cat that generally lay about the fire. In order to try my mechanical powers, I concluded to make a suit of clothing for puss, and for my purpose gathered some scraps of cloth that lay about the shop-board, and went to work as hard as I could. Late in the evening I got my suit of clothes finished; I caught the cat, put on the whole suit – coat, vest, and small-clothes [breeches] – buttoned all on tight, and set down my cat to inspect the fit.
“Unfortunately for me there was a hole through the floor close to the fireplace, just large enough for the cat to pass down; after making some efforts to get rid of the clothes, and failing, pussy descended through the hole and disappeared; the floor was tight and the house underpinned with brick, so there was no chance of pursuit. I consoled myself with a hope that the cat would extricate itself from its incumbrance, but not so; night came and I had made on a good fire and seated myself for some two or three hours after dark, when who should make their appearance but my master and mistress and two young men, all in good humor, with two or three bottles of rum. After all were seated around the fire, who should appear amongst us but the cat in his uniform. I was struck speechless, the secret was out and had no chance of concealing; the cat was caught, the whole work inspected and the question asked, is this your day’s work? I was obliged to answer in the affirmative; I would then have been willing to take a good whipping, and let it stop there, but no, to complete my mortification the clothes were carefully taken off the cat and hung up in the shop for the inspection of all customers that came in.”