CRINOLINE 1840-1865 (The French Word For Horsehair) The Age of Optimism The Industrial Revolution
CRINOLINE 1840-1865 (The French Word For Horsehair) The Age of Optimism The Industrial Revolution
18401865
(the French word for
horsehair)
The Industrial
Revolution
Your Professor (l.) and her sister, Jeana (r.) in Mobile, Al in the late 1950 s
dressed in Antebellum style to serve at functions at Oakleigh an antebellum
historic home
ABOUT the PERIOD
This period is named for the undergarment that held the skirts out at an
extreme distance from the body by use of a cage-like petticoat. The
INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION is in full swing.
Queen Victoria of England s influence is felt throughout the world. (Her
beloved husband, Albert dies in 1861, leaving her an actively-in-mourning
widow for the rest of her life.)
The period is also known as the AGE OF OPTIMISM because of all of
the new technology and improvements that the industrial revolution had
brought on, particularly with regards to travel and communication.
The advent of the SEWING MACHINE and ladies fashion magazines, as
well as the first ready-to-wear and the introduction of department stores,
moves the business of fashion forward in step with everything else at this
time. As a reaction to the standardization of clothing, the clothing of the
wealthy was delineated by quality, and we get the first couture houses in
France. Charles Frederick Worth was the first and most famous of the
couture designers(Although he worked in France, Victoria could justify
wearing his fashions because he was British-born)
Influential People
France-
Napoleon III
England-
VICTORIA! and Albert
Edward and Alexandra
Disraeli
America
Van Buren
* Harrison
Tyler
*Polk
Taylor
*Fillmore
Pierce
* Buchanan
Lincoln
Events
1844YMCA founded (Eng)
1845US Naval Academy at Annapolis opened
1846potato famine in Ireland
1846Brigham Young leads Mormons to the Great Salt Lake
1846New Mexico annexed by US from Mexico
1849Amelia Jenks Bloomer begins women s dress reforms
1850Crystal Palace Exhibition
1851Crimean War (1854-56 between Russia and France, Britain, Sardinia
& the Ottoman Empire)
1853Commodore Perry opens trade with Japan
1854Gadsden Purchase
1859Darwin completes On the Origin of Species by Natural Selection
1859John Brown s raid
1861Albert dies (and Victoria goes into permanent mourning)
1861the bombardment of Ft. Sumterwar begins
1862Lincoln publishes the Emancipation Proclamation
1863Battle of Gettysburg
1863Edward (Victoria s son) marries Alexandra of Denmark
1865Lincoln shot
186513th amendment to the Constitution abolishes slavery
Philosophy
Life Magazine
DRESS EXTREMES
Amelia Jenks Bloomer: an early women s rights activist
and dress reformer propounded that women wear a bi-
furcated garment for ease and comfort. Most of society did
not accept this, but the garment is ultimately given her name
(BLOOMERS), and by the end of the century, women do
wear them, as the suffragette movement takes on steam.
The costume of women should be suited to her wants and necessities. It
should conduce at once to her health, comfort, and usefulness; and, while it
should not fail also to conduce to her personal adornment, it should make
that end of secondary importance .
Visual Style
Architecture
1850Crystal Palace built
Style or Movement
THE PRE-RAPHAELITES
John Millais
Gabriel Dante Rosetti
Wm Holman Hunt
Ford Maddox Brown
***William Morris Decorative arts vs. Fine Arts
Matthew Bradywar photographer
Painters
Winslow Homer
*Renoir
Whistler
*Delacroix
Manet
*Degas
George Caleb Bingham
http://
The Crystal Palace was a cast-iron and glass building originally erected in Hyde Park,
London, England, to house the Great Exhibition of 1851. More than 14,000 exhibitors
from around the world gathered in the Palace's 990,000 square feet of exhibition space
to display examples of the latest technology developed in the Industrial Revolution.
Designed by Joseph Paxton, the Great Exhibition building was 1,850 feet long, with an
interior height of 108 feet.
Wikipedia
After the exhibition, the building was moved to a new
park in a wealthy area of London called Sydenham
Hill, an area not much changed today from the well-
http://www.
heeled suburb full of large Victorian villas that it was
during its Victorian heyday. The Crystal Palace was
enlarged and stood from 1854 until 1936, when it was
destroyed by fire. It attracted many thousands of
visitors from all levels of society.
Wikipedia
There is currently a campaign to
build a new Crystal Palace, on the
site of the original!!!
http://www.
newcrystalpalace.org
William Morris
Prints
The PRE-RAPHAELITES
The Brotherhood of the Pre-Raphaelites was a
group of artists and their followers who held to the
Romantic tenet that no great art came after Raphael
(when science and technology took over). They
lived what would have been considered at the time
to be a Bohemian lifestyle.
The art of this period embraces medieval themes
such as Arthurian legend, Damsels in distress,
Chivalry and Knighthood. Probably the most
universally familiar of these works is John William
Waterhouse s The Lady of Shallot
COUTURE FASHION
CHARLES
FREDERICK WORTH
and the
House of Worth
born Oct. 13, 1825, Bourne,
Lincolnshire, Eng.
died March 10, 1895, Paris, France
Men s Coats
Men-Other
HAIR
Parted in the middle and oiled back (with Macassar oil) **Muttonchops,
sideburns, Imperial beards, tufted beards, waxed moustaches
HATS
Top Hats (MUCH variety in shape and height) Bowlers, Derby, and
Boaters
SHOES
Leather pump
OUTER
Great-coats and The Inverness cape (with multiple cape-lets)
OTHER
Ties: Much variation in types
Martin Van Buren
Abraham Lincoln
In 1853 the frock coat and tail coat
are still the most common coats.
Men s Coats
The waistline returns to the natural waist , and the bodice of the previous period
is somewhat retained in that there is still a horizontal width to the cut, often with
a BERTHA collar, but now the shoulder is EXTREMELY slopedby several
inchesand the sleeve joins onto the bodice DOWN THE ARM (off the
shoulder).