Lilac. Traité du langage symbolique, emblématique et religieux des fleurs. 1855.
Internet Archive

seen from Germany
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Italy
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Belarus

seen from Türkiye

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia

seen from Türkiye

seen from Switzerland
seen from Russia

seen from Türkiye
Lilac. Traité du langage symbolique, emblématique et religieux des fleurs. 1855.
Internet Archive
Day Dress
c.1855
England
This type of widely protruding skirt that appeared around the middle of the 19th century came to be known later under the name of the "crinoline style." As can be seen with this dress, large design motifs proved immensely effective on these voluminous skirts. The border pattern here is wood-block printed and repeats every 20.6 cm. Compared to small-scale designs, large patterns require a solid technique to avoid misalignment of the print colors. Considering that this mixed fabric of silk and wool is a material hard to print on, this dress with its bright and cheerful colors is a particularly fine example on how much cloth printing techniques had evolved.
The Kyoto Costume Institute
Journal des Demoiselles, 1855 💙
which outfit would you rather wear? (ca. 1854-1859)
left 🖤🤍
right 🖤💜
requested by: @caeraashe
request: 1850s black dress with rainbow (or bright multi-color) fringe shawl
commentary from the curator: I think this was the most specific request I've looked for yet (which is totally fine btw, it just sometimes lessens my chance of finding the precise thing that was requested ☺️) so I was thrilled to find one, and then so, so excited to find two! I hope these are what you were looking for! ☺️
Springtime at Balmoral
C. B. Birch: ‘Goddess of the Sun’ for Hancock’s of London (1855)
Moon's phases. Elements of Astronomy. 1855.
Internet Archive