3 chapters
24 minute read
Selected Chapters
3 chapters
Smithsonian Press Washington, D.C. 1967
Smithsonian Press Washington, D.C. 1967
see caption Figure 1. — Dress of Sigmund von Herberstein for the Polish Embassy in 1517. Over his doublet and breeches he wears a brocade gown lined with silk. From Gratae Posteritati , 1560. ( Courtesy of British Museum, London. )...
15 minute read
John L. Nevinson
John L. Nevinson
A fashion plate is a costume portrait indicating a suitable style of clothing that can be made or secured. Fashion illustration began in the late 15th and early 16th centuries with portrait pictures that made a person’s identity known not by his individual features but rather by his dress. This paper, based on a lecture given in the fall of 1963 at the Metropolitan Museum, New York, traces the history of the fashion plate from its origins to its full development in the 19th century. With the imp
52 minute read
Origin and Early History Of the Fashion Plate
Origin and Early History Of the Fashion Plate
F ashion may be defined as a general style of dress appropriate for a particular person to wear at a certain time of day, on a special occasion, or for a specific purpose. A fashion plate is a costume portrait, that is to say, a portrait not of an individual but one which shows the sort of clothes that are being worn or that are likely to be worn. It is a generalized portrait, indicating the style of clothes that a tailor, dressmaker, or store can make or supply, or showing how different materia
23 minute read