Nearing the bodice finish line… read more about my 1910 wings of the dove dress
Oscar Noms!
Achievement in costume design: The Aviator (Sandy Powell — Orlando, Wings of the Dove, Shakespeare in Love, Far From Heaven), Finding Neverland (Alexandra Byrne — Phantom of the Opera, Elizabeth, Persuasion), A Series of Unfortunate Events (Colleen Atwood — Sleepy Hollow, Little Women), Ray (Sharen Davis — Devil in a Blue Dress), Troy (Bob Ringwood — Alien 3 & Resurrection, AI, Star Trek Nemesis, Dune). ooooo, tough call for me between The Aviator and Finding Neverland (with Series of Unfortunate Events coming in third). Troy?
Also of interest! Art direction: The Aviator, Finding Neverland, A Series of Unfortunate Events, Phantom of the Opera, A Very Long Engagement.
I’m thrilled to see that Kate Winslet (Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind) and Cate Blanchett (The Aviator) were nominated, both because they are fabulous actresses but also because they are sure to wear something smashing. And Clive Owen was nominated for Closer. Yum.
Exhibition Review
I’ve been having annoying server problems that wouldn’t let me FTP to my site, so sorry about the long silence!
Last weekend I went to a conference in Boston, which provided a fabulous opportunity to go see the High Style and Hoopskirts: 1850s Fashion exhibition at the Museum of Fine Arts. I met up with Jenni of Historically Dressed and we had a great time drooling over the gorgeous gowns and accessories.
The exhibit was small by most museum standards, although large by MFA standards — about 10 dresses and various accessories (hats, gloves, jewelry, etc.). Some of the hats were really gorgeous — like this taupe bonnet and some great indoor caps. This indoor cap really caught my eye, mostly because of the stripey ribbon, but also because we could wrap our brains around how it was put together (unfortunately, it’s hard to tell from the angle they photographed it). There were also some nice evening headdresses, something that modern costumers hardly ever do — inspired me to try to put something similar together the next time I do 1840s-60s evening.
Side note: this dance card was impossibly wee and very beautiful.
But on to the dresses! There were two that really struck me (well, there was a third beautiful white evening dress, but I can’t find a picture online). When you first walk in you are confronted with this purple beauty. Most interesting to me was the fact that the trim (the sleeve ruffles and the fringe on the center front of the skirt) really seemed to echo a robe a la francaise. This green plaid evening gown was also really striking; both because I like green, and because it has a tiny pink stripe going through it, which they carefully levelled the skirt around so that the tiny pink stripe was at the very bottom of the hem (you can barely see this using the interactive zoom; the pink pops much more in person).
So overall, thumbs up! If you happen to be the area, definitely go see it, but it’s small enough that I wouldn’t travel excessively far just to see it.
1910 Wings of the Dove Dress
Draping step one accomplished! read more about my 1910 wings of the dove afternoon dress
1910 Wings of the Dove Dress
I’ve just been reading a 1917 dressmaking manual at VintageSewing.info… read more about my 1910 Wings of the Dove dress

