c. 1925 JEAN PATOU Paris, Cannes, Monte Carlo Couture Numbered Ecru and Black Silk Velvet Flapper Party Dress Trimmed in Rhinestones and Faux Pearls
Evening dress, late 1920s
Jessie Franklin Turner
Silk
Gift of Aline Bernstein, 1948 (C.I.48.3.3)
The nonchalant "hang" of this design is derived from the pretailored forms of regional dress as much as the planar silhouettes endorsed in the 1920s. Jessie Franklin Turner, a custom dressmaker especially famed for her sinuously draped tea gowns, created evening dresses with exotic allusions, often in fabrics of her own design. Although the simple chemise shaping of the gown suggests an earlier date, the designer has introduced a velvet border that extends into a train to reflect the vogue for increasingly long hemlines at the end of the 1920s.
First Lady Grace Coolidge's evening dress
One of the White House's most stylish and popular hostesses, first lady Grace Coolidge wore this chiffon velvet evening dress during her husband's administration. The dress, typical of the 1920s' "flapper" fashion, has a detachable train (not shown) and matching velvet shoes with rhinestone trim. (National Museum of American History)
Vintage Betty said:Thanks for the feedback! I went ahead and deleted the non-1920's items; it didn't feel correct to leave them in this thread.
Miss 1929, when do we get to see all your goodies? And could you explain this phrase? "couching it down to the lining everywhere possible".
Thank you-
Vintage Betty
Miss 1940's said:My D.M.D is so Beautiful!
Miss 1929 said:Thank you, DDD!
And for some reason, I have a distinct memory of feeling really fat that day (smacks forehead in self-disgust). Of course at that time I worked in a vintage store, and was surrounded by mirrors and tiny vintage clothes all day, that will skew one's perspective.
It is indeed beaded, that dress weighted about 15 pounds. Hard to see it but the item on the side of my head was a brooch that had birds in the same colors.
Vintage Betty said: