Dressing gown of gathered, iridescent royal blue silk with V-neckline and single hook and eye closure at center-front bodice
- Title
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Dressing gown of gathered, iridescent royal blue silk with V-neckline and single hook and eye closure at center-front bodice
- LC Subject
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loungewear
- Donor
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Gill, P. C., Mrs.
Gill, Percy Margaret
- Designer
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Lanvin, Jeanne, 1867-1946
- Description
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Dressing gown of gathered, iridescent royal blue silk with V-neckline and single hook and eye closure at center-front bodice; gown is accented with silk flowers on a leafy vine that forms a wreath around the bodice and sleeves; same flowers and vines trim the opening and hemline; long sleeves are turned up to form cuffs and pleated with the sleeve gathered into the seam; neckline, opening, and hem have fabric folded over into a center seam ruffle with dress fabric gathered into the seam; lower mid-length; unlined.
- Designer Label
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Jeanne Lanvin Paris/ 22. Faubourg S'Honor_
- Motif
-
Silk flowers
- Work Type
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dressing gowns
- Location
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France
- Date
-
1910/1919
- Identifier
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1900.007.007
- Rights
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In Copyright
- License
-
Creative Commons: Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International
- Type
-
Image
- Format
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image/tiff
- Material
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Silk
- Technique
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Gathering; Ruffle trim
- Set
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Historic and Cultural Textile and Apparel Collection
- Primary Set
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Historic and Cultural Textile and Apparel Collection
- Institution
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Oregon State University
- Note
-
Jeanne Lanvin (1867-1946) opened a millinery shop in Paris in 1890. She became known for the beautiful dresses she was making for her daughter so, in 1909, Lanvin opened her dressmaking business.
By 1915 she had developed the style for which she was most famous, the robes de style. These dresses went against the prevailing style of the time, and featured a small waist and full skirt. Lanvin continued to design the robes de style dresses even in the 1920s.
Lanvin died in 1946, and the business was taken over by her daughter, who hired Antonio del Castillo in 1950 to design the collection. During this time, the house became known as Lanvin-Castillo.
Castillo left in 1962 and was replaced by Jules-Francois Crahay, who was the head designer from 1963 until 1984. After that time there was a succession of designers including Herv_ Leger and Claude Montana. In 2002, Elber Albaz became chief designer at Lanvin.
Credit: Lizzie Bramlett, fuzzylizzie.com via VFG.com