Now, I ask you, dear NineteenTeen readers: is this print not perfectly wonderful?
I’m not absolutely certain of
the date of this marvelous “Bathing Place Assembly Ball Dress” print from La Belle Assemblée. One source lists it
as being from January 1813...but would anyone really be interested in “bathing
place” attire in winter? On the other hand, the placement of description of the
dress at the top of the plate is in keeping with other La Belle Assemblée prints from 1809-1810, so I’m going to go with August or September of one of those years.
It shows a young woman strategically
posed before a full-length mirror so that the viewer very conveniently gets a
look at the back of this delightful dress. I can’t begin to guess the materials
used, but the style gives more than a passing nod to drapery techniques—the ribbon
drawing up the overskirt and the peplum-like decorations in back make me think of custom window
treatments. Note the tops of the sleeves—strips of the green fabric, woven in a
lattice—and the frill of lace extending all around the neckline, and the little
lion’s head belt buckle.
And her hat! It’s a delightful cross between a Nelson bicorne and a Carmen Miranda head-dress (do I spy a pineapple in there?) and utterly made of win. Notice too how her hair is arranged, with a braid across the forehead ending in a fetching little curl!
And her hat! It’s a delightful cross between a Nelson bicorne and a Carmen Miranda head-dress (do I spy a pineapple in there?) and utterly made of win. Notice too how her hair is arranged, with a braid across the forehead ending in a fetching little curl!
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