As I mentioned last time I am working on a version of the outfit to the left for an event coming up soon in July. I wanted something with a hat to shade my face, and not too hot since we are going to be outside in the middle of a Virginian summer. The fabric gods were not kind, when I went to my local fabric stores. There was really nothing in the right weight, color, pattern, fiber, or amount; especially the amount since I need about 8 yards for the undergown and 10 yards for the overdress. Part of the problem is that there are no waist seams, so each piece has to be cut from a long continuous length of material. Also, those sleeves are about four yards by themselves. I resigned myself to ordering online, which I hate doing because it's so hard to be sure of the color etc without seeing it in person, and by the time the fabric arrives often there just isn't time to send it back and get something else. I went first to an oldie, but a goodie; Thai silks. I knew they would...
Amphorae were pottery vessels created to hold and transport goods in the Greek and Roman world; some were even highly decorative and given as prizes, or used to hold the ashes of the dead. Join me as I delve into the vessels of history...
I has to be nylon stockings. I thought it interesting that Lady Hallam in UP/Down got involved with a producer of Nylons, I wonder if it was suppose to be a Dupont. They would have been friends of the Kennedys social station.
ReplyDeleteNylons is correct. I have yet to fathom the intense devotion people had to nylon stockings, although I suppose they were far superior to the alternative.
DeleteI'm late, but...stockings?
ReplyDeleteLaurie
Just sneaked a peak at the answer. I read somewhere that the alternative to stockings was something akin to today's sunless tanning lotion...that streaked back then too.
ReplyDeleteLaurie
Yes! Isn't that part about the painted-on stockings a little crazy?
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