Showing posts with label vintage sewing patterns. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vintage sewing patterns. Show all posts

Friday, April 20, 2018

1950s Cocktail Dresses






Most agree cocktail dresses reached their height in the 1950s. After the end of World War II, a surge in the popularity of "at-home" cocktail parties created the need for women to have a short dress suitable for more formal occasions - in essence, a short version of an evening gown. Dior is said to have first coined the phrase "cocktail dress" in the late 1940s. 



French designers released cocktail-specific dresses. Less expensive ready-to-wear dresses were eagerly embraced by American women. A great many sewing patterns for cocktail dresses were also produced in the 1950s. High fashion was now available to everyone.




Cocktail parties helped define women's roles as wives and hostesses. They were also a means to promote or further their husband's career.



The beauty of most 1950s cocktail dresses is the design of pleating, ruching, folds and gathers. 



There are two main cocktail dress styles: the bouffant skirt dress and the sheath dress. The full skirted dresses were always worn with a petticoat or two. The sheath dresses were slim around the body. The hourglass silhouette of both styles required the wearing of bullet bras, waist-cinchers, corselets and girdles.

By the mid-1960s, formal dress for cocktail parties began to give way to more casual attire. By the late 60s - 1970s, hostesses wore a "hostess dress" - a full length dress with a simpler design than those of the 1950s. Hostess dresses are sometimes called patio dresses as cocktail parties moved outdoors.



The Pattern Patter Team on etsy offers a large variety of cocktail dress patterns. 


Row One: 
McCall's 4357 @ BluetreeSewingStudio
Vogue 199 @ ViennasGrace
McCall's 3781 @ Redcurlzs
McCall's 6044 @ CloesCloset

Row Two
Vogue 4218 @ VintagePatternStore
Vogue 1881 @ VogueVixens
Butterick 7648 @ TheTinThimble
McCall's 3827 @ ThePatternSource

Row Three
Butterick 6095 @ FindCraftyPatterns
Butterick 5557 @ PurplePlaidPenguin
Modes Royale 1883 @ kinseysue
McCall's 4417 @ honeymoonbus

Row Four
Vogue 4963 @ sewbettyanddot
Butterick 5557 @ retroactivefuture
Modes Royale 1749 @ stitchingbynumbers
Advance 110 @ SewAsItWasPatterns

Friday, August 4, 2017

Ladies, Kindly Remove Your Hats


It's been decades since movie theaters asked ladies to remove their hats. Hats are lovely and add a special touch to an ensemble.

Hats have been worn since the time of the ancient Egyptians. For hundreds of years, a modest woman would cover her head. However, over the decades, the wearing of hats has diminished. There are still many religious groups whose female members wear head coverings. The come-as-you-are to church philosophy is not embraced by all and ladies continue to wear "church clothes" which includes a hat. Members of royalty also wear hats in public. Hats are seemingly mandatory at horse races such as the Kentucky Derby and Steeplechase.

Princess Diana's turban from the 1980s.








Some of the most extravagant hats are from the Edwardian era. Women's hats became a statement of wealth and influence in the highly structured society of that time. Fortunes were paid for exotic dyed feathered hats. For a time entire stuffed birds were used to adorn hats.

Macy's ad, 1909

                                                        ca. 1910 photos


The Roaring Twenties arrived and with it short hair. Ladies needed a hat which would cover their head and look well with a bobbed cut.








Catalog ads for 1920s hats.


By the 1930s and 1940s, hats had moved on from the cloche and various styles flourished.
Spring 1942: Lilly Dache hat is on the left; Hattie Carnegie hat is on the right.


Schiaparelli hats, ca. 1940s





John Frederics Silk & Straw

Chanel, 1930

Lilly Dache Headpieces


           
Lilly Dache
Stetsons for her, ca. 1940s.

In the 1950s and early 1960s, hats became even more diverse. Wide brims and pillboxes
 were popular.  Smaller hats with netting continued to be worn.

Audrey Hepburn in Breakfast at Tiffany's.




Dior, 1954

Givenchy


The 1960s!



                                                  


Here are some examples of avant garde head-wear     

Alexander McQueen
Armani, 2014

Issey Miyake

Unknown


The Pattern Patter team offers a wide variety of hat patterns for children and adults. Here is just a small sampling. Visit our team members' shops to see more lovely hat patterns, ranging from vintage to modern to retro.  The shop names are underneath the collages - just click on the name for more information about a specific hat pattern.

In addition, the Pattern Patter Team has a number of boards on Pinterest. Please follow us - members add patterns  and pictures daily. 




Row #1 --- kinseysue;  sandritocat;  TabbysVintageShop
Row #2 --- PurplePlaidPenguin;  ThePatternSourceCherryCorners


Here's a handy reference chart of hat styles.



Monday, July 13, 2015

All That Jazz



McCall Quarterly, Autumn, 1928
www.studentpulse.com

The conclusion of World War I, the "War to End All Wars", brought dramatic change to the United States as well as other countries.  Soldiers returned home with stories of amazing people and places they had seen and were unwilling to go back to the farm, as the old song says. So much carnage on a world-wide scale had never before been seen.  Young people in particular felt they had to live for the moment since the future is not guaranteed.


from Pinterest

Technology, manufacturing, and customs changed quickly.  The world became smaller as airplane travel was not an unrealistic dream, but a reality.  Automobiles were quickly produced and rapidly sold.  Cars made it possible to travel several states in a single day. Many advertisements targeted women drivers.


1928 Chevrolet ad
from anythingaboutcars.com



ad from The Delineator, 1923
via tumblr.com

Women won the right to vote in 1920 (the 19th Amendment) and never looked back.  They eagerly traded in their corsets, bustles, and voluminous petticoats for freedom of movement.  One could not hop into a car, dance freely, or go to work in such cumbersome attire. 


Actress Louise Brooks wearing a fur trimmed coat and cloche hat 
www.en.wikipedia.com

Hemlines rose, but not overnight.  It wasn't until 1925 that hemlines reached the knee - a perfect length for dancing the Charleston until dawn.  Waistlines had begun to drop in the latter war years and by 1922 settled at the hips.  Because of shorter dress lengths, shoes and stockings became more than a necessity - they became a fashion statement.  Silk stockings were produced in a large variety of colors and patterns.  Shoes, stockings, and dresses became more coordinated.  The most popular style of shoe in this decade was the Mary Jane ankle strap button shoe. 

Montgomery Ward catalog ad, 1920s
via pinterest.com

Sears, Roebuck catalog, 1925
via clickamericana.com

Arms were bared in public, many young ladies openly smoked, and no longer did they retreat to the powder room to apply makeup.  Compacts and cigarette cases from both the 20s and 30s are popular collectibles.


Actress Gloria Swanson
photo by John Abbe, 1921

Bernard Hewitt catalog, 1928
via costumerism.tumblr.com

Another law with far-reaching consequences was also enacted in 1920 - Prohibition.  The Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution made it  illegal to sell alcohol in the US. It was repealed in 1933. Nightclubs and speakeasies popped up overnight.  It became socially acceptable for men and women to get dressed up, take their new car, and go out dancing and drinking.


Giggle Water cocktail ad, 1928
from pinterest.com



Flappers smoking in a train car
www.smithsonian.com

For many, the Roaring 20s was a period of prosperity and elegance. Evening attire in particular was used to show off wealth.  The materials, accessories, headpieces, and shoes were as elegant and expensive as the owner could afford.  Fur coats were standard apparel for women of means.


photo from timetraveler.com



Actress Bebe Daniels, ca. 1927
www.1920s-fashion-and-music-com

Derry & Toms Autumn Fashions, 1928
via www.fotolibra.com


Many famous designers got their beginnings in the 1920s:  Chanel, Lanvin, Patou, Fortuny, Molyneux, and Vionnet are a few of the most well-know names.


via glamourdaze.com
Coco Chanel's "Little Black Dress" was introduced in the 20s

"Jeanne Lanvin invented what was called the robe de style made of velvet and silk.  She often designed this dress in robin's egg blue, a shade which is now known as Lanvin blue." (source: www.1920s-fashion-and-music.com)


1929 Lanvin robe de style, photograph by Granger
Metropolitan Museum of Art

No self-respecting woman appeared in public without a hat, and the cloche is the iconic hat of the 1920s.  Reportedly, Caroline Reboux of France, a milliner, invented it around 1923.  One variation of the cloche dipped lower on one side than the other, giving it a rakish appearance.  

photo from imgarcade.com

The popular cloche has been cited as one of the reasons women began to opt for short hair.  Long hair prevented the cloche from being worn tightly on the head, as it was intended.  Several short hairstyles were popular in the 20s.




Finger Waves
1920s-fashion-and-music.com


Bobbed hair - note the bee sting lips
1920s-fashion-and-music.com


Actress Louise Brooks wearing the Dutch boy
1920s-fashion-and-music.com

Josephine Baker's Eton Crop
photo via huffingtonpost.com
Getty Images

Both day and evening dresses were long, lean, and angular. A boyish figure was sought after - so much so that larger busted women bandaged their breasts or wore a Symington Side Lacer.  This bra could be laced at both sides and pulled tightly.  In essence, it was a corset for the bust.  Other flappers wore a bra which consisted of sections of lace bandeau lined in net.  Underwear was minimal, generally knickers and chemise.  Both were sheer and lightweight.
Sear, Roebuck and Co. ad for stockings
via www.glamourdaze.com


1920s lingerie ad via vintagedancer.com


Several sources state the term "Flapper" originated in Great Britain where there was a short-lived fad of young women wearing unbuckled galoshes. They flapped when walking. The name stuck even after the fad passed and "flapper" evolved to mean a liberated young woman.


Wedding Gown
House of Callot Soeurs design for Edna Johnson 1926
www.larkcrafts.com

The 1920s were flanked on one end by the end of World War I and the other by the stock market crash of 1929. In just eleven short years, America was forever changed.  The image of the flapper is to many the definitive symbol of the Roaring 20s.


photo via meetup.com
by kinseysue on etsy

reference sources:
www.fashionera.com
www.encyclopedia.com
www.1920-30.com 
www.1920s-fashion-and-music.com

Below are some original 1920s sewing patterns, courtesy of the Pattern Patter Team on etsy. 


McCall 4622 from FloradoraPresents; 
Ladies' Home Journal 5947 from allthepreciousthings


  


Mail Order 6794 from MidvaleCottage; 
Butterick 1741 from VintageNeedleFinds


Pictorial Review 4168 from SelvedgeShop; 
Superior 9064 from DejaVuPatterns
Butterick 1832 from Mrsdepew; 
McCall 4881 from ShellMakeYouFlip


McCall 4987 from kinseysue