This little catalogue was produced by a Scottish mail-order knitwear firm in 1982 and shows some fashionably conservative clothes from the period. Note, once again, the pie-crust frills on the shirts worn by the models in the top picture! The pleated skirts were also very true to the era - in fact I can remember owning something like them myself!
Saturday, August 18, 2012
"Bisy Backson" (Pilochtry Knitwear, Spring 1982)
If I've been missing in action the past few weeks it's because I've been travelling - and managing to pick up a pile of early 60s fashion magazines and some Victorian and Edwardian photographs and postcards along the way. I have to sort them out and scan them before I can post them to this blog, so meanwhile ... here's a little something I found among the craft books in a charity shop today:
Sunday, July 1, 2012
Lana Lobell Fashion Magazine, Spring 1977
Beware - there be lots and lots of polyester between the covers of this catalogue!
Actually, I quite like the outfit displayed on the cover of this little booklet. It's made of acrylic knit rather than polyester, and perhaps would have been considered a little old-fashioned and conservative in its day. Ironically, this is why I find it pleasing, as a lot of the more fashionable women's wear of 1977 seems to me to resemble nothing so much as sacks with drawstrings around the waist!
Tuesday, June 26, 2012
Style Pattern Book, Autumn-Winter 1982
Look! It's a model wearing a pie-crust frill collar. It must be the early eighties! This particular form of neck-wear was a favourite of the young Princess Diana and it quickly made its way into the shops and onto the streets.
Later in the decade the fashions would become less romantic and more assertive - and shoulder pads would grow, grow, grow.
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
Koch & Co. Fashion Catalog, Fall and Winter 1892-3
It was cold day in Canberra today, with icy winds blowing down from the mountains. Thus it was distinctly cheering to find the latest addition to my collection awaiting me on the doorstep when I got home. The clothes illustrated in this fashion catalogue from the 1890s look enviably warm, too! Later pages show a generous selection of coats, cloaks and cosy wrappers for home wear.
Friday, June 8, 2012
Ballgowns: British Glamour Since 1950
Or maybe I should visit them more often, because look what I found today!
Ballgowns: British Glamour Since 1950 is the catalogue of an exhibition held by the Victoria & Albert Museum so it tends to be long on glossy photographs of the exhibits and short on text. (As an aside, the photographs are gorgeous indeed, and make me envious of those who live within easy travelling distance of the V&A. Here's hoping this exhibition eventually comes to Australia!) However the book does contain a couple of essays: "The magic circle: designing the ballgown" by Oriole Cullen and "Ballgowns: the rituals of dressing up" by Sonnett Stanfill as well as an introduction by Magdalene Keaney.
Just one small thing puzzles me about this book. Flicking through the plates I notice that most of the photographs are of gowns from the mid-1960s onwards. Surely the golden era of the formal ballgown was in the 1950s! However, this may reflect the V&A's collections as much as anything else.
The Ballgown: British Glamour Since 1950
London: V&A Publishing, 2012
ISBN 9781851776849
Sunday, June 3, 2012
Fashion Service, January 1928
It's now officially winter in Australia! Time to hunt out those warm, woolly garments. This outfit, worn by a bright-eyed hiker on the cover of the first issue of Fashion Service for 1928, certainly looks cosy enough. Unfortunately the magazine doesn't offer patterns for the "heavy, hand-knitted sweater" or the "knitted tam and scarf" that accompany her "black kasha flannel skirt".
Friday, May 25, 2012
Le Petit Echo de la Mode, 31 Mars 1935
It's cold, wet and blustery outside. What I really need is a smart, weatherproof trench-coat - like these French examples from the 1930s!
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