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Ball Gown

c. 1880

The Kyoto Costume Institute

The Kyoto Costume Institute
Shimogyo-ku, Kyoto, Japan

This dress is a princess style, Valenciennes lace in three separate plant patterns are set in organdy. The lace used amounts to a length of roughly 50 meters.
The Princess dress was named in honor of Alexandra, Princess of Wales (1844–1925, later Queen of Britain). It had no horizontal seams at the waist, but used vertical seams to fit closely to the waist, emphasizing the bust and hips. It was fashionable around 1880. Jean Béraud (1849–1935) painted this style of dress in "Une soirée" (1878, Musée d'Orsay). Though this style was only for a short time, it can be seen as an example of body conscious in the nineteenth-century.

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  • Title: Ball Gown
  • Fashion House: (illegible)
  • Label: (illegible)
  • Date Created: c. 1880
  • Location Created: America
  • Type: Dress
  • Photographer: ©The Kyoto Costume Institute, photo by Taishi Hirokawa
  • Rights: Collection of The Kyoto Costume Institute
  • Medium: White linen organdy and Valenciennes lace; one-piece princess dress; train with dust ruffle.
The Kyoto Costume Institute

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