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Gown (fourreau)
Thanks to the designer Paul Poiret tubular dresses became fashionable from 1906. In French this slender silhouette is called fourreau, or sheath. The purple taffeta divides this dress into three parts and creates the illusion of short sleeves. All of this is typical for 1910, as are the voluminously rendered flowers. They are not embroidered flatly, but fashioned of tiny loops and knots.
Creator
- anonymous
- anonymous
- Keith Fullerton Whitman
Subject
- Mée, Anna Maria du
Type of item
- Object Type: fashion objects
- fashion objects
Creator
- anonymous
- anonymous
- Keith Fullerton Whitman
Subject
- Mée, Anna Maria du
Type of item
- Object Type: fashion objects
- fashion objects
Providing institution
Aggregator
Rights statement for the media in this item (unless otherwise specified)
- http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/mark/1.0/
Creation date
- 1910
- 1910
Places
- France
- The Netherlands
- France
- Kingdom of the Netherlands
Identifier
- BK-16406
- http://mint-projects.image.ntua.gr/europeana-fashion/BK-16406
Extent
- geheel length 148.0 cm
- geheel waist 68.0 cm
- rok width 160.0 cm
Format
- taffeta
- metal thread
- silk
- cotton (textile)
- Silk
- Metallic thread
- Georgette
- Taffeta
- Cotton
Language
- nl
- nld
Year
- 1910
Providing country
- Netherlands
Collection name
First time published on Europeana
- 2022-04-21T11:41:12.945Z
Last time updated from providing institution
- 2022-04-21T11:41:12.945Z