Monday, August 8, 2011

Fashions for August 1831

Monday, August 8, 2011
Loretta reports:

A few more examples of fashions from the time period of Last Night's Scandal.
 ~~~
FASHIONS FOR AUGUST, 1831. 
EXPLANATION OF THE PRINTS OF THE FASHIONS.

English Fashions.
Morning Dress.
A White jaconot muslin dress; the corsage square, and gathered round the top into a band, which is lightly embroidered at each edge; the fulness disposed in small plaits, arranged en cœur. The sleeve is an improvement on the imbecille form, very large at top, and wide, but not extravagantly so at the wrist. Two deep flounces of rich embroidery, placed one immediately above the other, go round the border, and reach rather above the knee. The apron is of changeable gros de Naples, lilac shot with white: it is arranged in bands, disposed en cœur before and behind; and ornamented on each shoulder, and at the back of the ceinture, with nœuds of ribbon to correspond. English lace cap; the caul of moderate height; the trimming of the front light, short at the ears, and partially drooping over the left side of the forehead: it is trimmed with knots of cut ribbon to correspond with the apron; the brides fasten in bows and ends on the right side.

Evening Dress.
A Dress of mousseline de soie, white figured in gold colour; the corsage cut plain and square behind, and in crossed drapery and very low in front. A guimpe, that is a plain standing up tucker of blond lace, is seen in the centre of the bosom only Béret sleeves, of the usual form. The hair is turned back in a low soft bow on each side of the forehead, which is ornamented with a gold ferronière, and disposed in full bows on the summit of the head. A blond lace scarf is arranged in the lappet style round the bows: it is attached by a bouquet of roses placed in front, and another behind. Neck chain, bracelets, &c., gold, of rich but light workmanship.
La Belle Assemblée, 1831

Saturday, August 6, 2011

Breakfast Links: Week of August 1, 2011

Saturday, August 6, 2011
Happy August! We celebrate the last month of summer with a fresh serving of Breakfast Links – our weekly round-up of favorite links to other blogs, sites, pictures, and articles gathered from around the Twitterverse.
Free British Museum iPad App: "The Historical Collection": http://wp.me/pGJsu-1JS
• Gorgeous 18th c French clocks, including recordings of their chimes: http://bit.ly/oKIIL0
Living Room Installation at The Jewish Museum Evokes Everyday Life in 1930s Berlin: http://bit.ly/ntWKvD
• A sumptuous silk coat by designer Yves Saint Laurent, who would have turned 75 on August 1: http://met.org/mXTdX3
• Women at Sea giving birth upon wave; a brief history of children born at sea: http://bit.ly/pTJZXx
• Rome's Pantheon may have been built as a massive sundial, researchers reveal http://tgr.ph/oZPlMU
• Brooches and bouquets: two high-profile senders of symbolic messages http://bit.ly/ohcBF2
• "So common-minded, so salacious & so illiterate": Georgette Heyer on Barbara Cartland after repeated plagiarism: http://bit.ly/nW99ze
• Architect Barbie's dreamhouse (with a closet on every floor of course!): http://bit.ly/rmORw9
• Mysteries of the Catacombs in Paris http://bit.ly/puRuQe
• A Revolutionary War Story of Intrigue at Hilton Head Island, SC, by http://bit.ly/q2f7lB
• Video of Jesse Owens' incredible victory in 100m at 1936 Berlin Olympics on 3 August: http://bit.ly/qOMu0M
• Beautiful! Bride tells story of her 127 year old family heirloom wedding dress - http://bit.ly/q5E48w
• Russian icons dated from the 16th-19th c. discovered at St. Catherine's Monastery in impeccable condition: http://bit.ly/ocZIAy
• Why did so many of Jane Austen's men choose the life of a clergyman? http://bit.ly/r5UDtc
• Mrs. John Winthrop, 1773: Amazing grace & dignity in a portrait: http://bit.ly/roudqg
• Tsar Nicholas II and his family arrived on the Isle of Wight on August 2nd, 1909 http://dlvr.it/dpjDg
• Great online exhibition from the Bodleian Library - A Nation of Shopkeepers: Trade Ephemera 1654-1860s: 
• 'An Account of Miss Rosco & Miss Osborne, actresses at the Crow-street theatre, Dublin 1759-60' http://bit.ly/fV4dKN
Greyfriars Bobby who kept vigil over his master's grave for 14 years was 'a publicity stunt': http://dlvr.it/dyZcR

Friday, August 5, 2011

The Last Living Witness to the Lincoln Assassination, 1956

Friday, August 5, 2011

Susan reporting:

Most of the videos we've featured here have their share of silliness mixed into the history. This one, however, isn't silly at all.  It's just plain amazing.

Consider it a double-dose of real history. Filmed in the Golden Age of television game shows, it's a clip from the popular series I've Got a Secret. The game was simple enough: regular folks with surprising careers, experiences, or histories – their "secrets" – try to stump the celebrity panel, who ask a limited number of questions.  This elderly gentleman's secret, however, is far from usual. Samuel J. Seymour is 96 years old, and as a five-year-old boy attending Ford's Theatre as a treat on April 14, 1865, he saw John Wilkes Booth assassinate President Abraham Lincoln. It's one more reminder of how relatively short American history is, and a poignant one at that.
Many thanks to Patrick O'Neil, Assistant Professor of History, Methodist University, Fayetteville, NC for sharing this video with us.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

A Gothic Dairy

Thursday, August 4, 2011
Loretta reports:


Dairies on country estates could be beautiful things.  This gives some insight into hygienic measures.
~~~
HINTS ON ORNAMENTAL GARDENING
PLATE 7.—A GOTHIC DAIRY

The annexed design represents the decorated elevation of a picturesque building, suitable to a bay or garden recess, in which they are appropriately situated, and always pleasing: its interior embellishments should be of marble, relieved by glazed tiles; and if painted in the Gothic forms by which the spandrels of some of our cathedrals are tesselated, it would be in good taste and character; and the windows being judiciously ornamented with painted glass, the whole would be brilliant and agreeable.
 
The requisites for the perfection of a dairy are, coolness and the most delicate cleanliness, a perfect ventilation, and an aspect that will permit the sun to enter the apartment until its altitude would render the dairy too warm; for the damps which remain from the night cannot be too soon or too thoroughly evaporated ; and even the moisture consequent on the morning ablutions should be speedily removed, to prevent the effects of that degree of heat and moisture which in a hot day would else be consequent upon such neglect: on a similar account, this building ought not to be embowered too much by trees and shrubs, and care should be taken that no trees may be placed in its neighbourhood that can impart unfavourable tastes or scents to the milk and cream,which readily adopt incongruous flavours, and are very tenacious in retaining them.

A double roof is essential to the dairy, and a free current of air should pass between them, or no means will prevent the excess of heat, which in hot weather is fatal to its purposes, particularly if the floors are wet or very damp at the same time.
 
Although part of the above observations are at variance with the usual practices in the business of the dairy, a little reflection will shew the propriety of adopting them. 
Ackermann's Repository, August 1821

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

A Bride with Wedding Night Jitters, c. 1750

Wednesday, August 3, 2011
Susan reporting:

Doubtless fueled by pictures of primly dressed cardboard Thanksgiving Pilgrims, many modern Americans believe that their forefathers & mothers were chaste and modest, too busy creating a new country to give way to impure thoughts, let alone actions.

Not so. The years directly before the American Revolution showed a record number of premarital pregnancies and babies born soon after marriages - records that in some cases weren't equaled until the 1960s. Despite the warnings of the colonial church, sex was not only practiced outside of marriage, but freely discussed and joked about, too. This bawdy story comes from the diary of John Adams, and while it might have been embellished a bit for the audience, it shows that even in supposedly straight-laced New England, a good jest with double-entendres was considered an excellent way "to raise the spirits" - and it also seems that the new Mistress Bicknal enjoyed herself, too.

"Last Thursday Night, at Cranach's Wedding, Dr. Tufts, in the Room where the Gentlemen were, said We used to have on these Occasions, some good Matrimonial stories, to raise our spirits. The story of B. Bicknal's Wife is a very clever one. She said, when she was married she was very anxious, she feared, she trembled, she could not go to Bed. But she recollected she had put her Hand to the Plow and could not look back, so she mustered her Spirits, committed her soul to God, and her Body to B. Bicknal and into Bed she leaped and in the Morning she was amazed, she could not think for her Life what it was that had scared her so."

Many thanks to John Bell for reminding us of this passage - and please check out his excellent Boston 1775, a blog devoted to history, analysis, and unabashed gossip about the start of the American Revolution in Massachusetts.

Above: Detail from Illustration for 'Wedding Proposals', print by Daniel Nikolaus Chodowiecki (1726-1801), 1780, Gift of Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Talpis, Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
 
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