Edwardian Fashion Spiral-Bound | February 18, 2014

Daniel Milford-Cottam

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Renowned for its graciousness and elegance, the fashions of the 1910s would undergo some quite revolutionary changes. In the early years of Edward VII’s reign fashionable ladies wore delicately colored, flower-and-lace-trimmed trailing gowns over tight corsets, accessorized by elaborate hairstyles. Women scoured the new fashion magazines to see the new designs from Parisian couturiers, such as Worth and Jeanne Paquin. From around 1906, these excessively luxurious fashions began to fade away, with a new designer, Paul Poiret, causing a stir with his richly colored column gowns and turbans. By 1914, women’s wear was transformed with women wearing boldly colored, dramatically stylized Eastern-inspired kimono wraps, slender hobble skirts, ankle-skimming tunic dresses and turbans. Daniel Milford-Cottam explains these new developments in fashion, and how different fashions were worn by both the most fashionable ladies, and those on more limited budgets. The book will also look at the evolution of men’s wear during this period, including the development of the more modern three-piece suit and more relaxed, less formal menswear.
Publisher: Macmillan
Original Binding: Trade Paperback
Pages: 64 pages
ISBN-10: 074781404X
Item Weight: 0.3 lbs
Dimensions: 6.0 x 0.2 x 8.1 inches
"This book is a must-read for those who are writers of the era or are simply fascinated, as I am, by the gorgeous designs of the age." —The Historical Novel Review
Daniel Milford-Cottam has studied the history of dress from a young age. While assistant curator in the Furniture, Textiles and Fashion department at the Victoria and Albert Museum, he worked on the Wedding Dress exhibition and the accompanying publication.