I was in our Hancock's today, since they've just announced they'll be closing and I wanted to scope out the beginning sales. There were a few colorful cotton prints that caught my eye. Most of them had a 60s-ish feel, although not terribly so, but one instantly made me think of a 1930s dress:
Kitchy Kitchen "Blueberry," by Robert Kaufman
The blue isn't nearly as navy as it looks on my screen; it's a dark, intense royal blue. From the ruler, you can see that it's a little larger than the swatch on the screen. I like it, because it's simple and colorful (and WHITE, not cream) and more spray-like than flower heads geometrically spaced across the fabric. It made me think of a late 1930s dress, with a fuller, shorter skirt and maybe flutter sleeves. The fabric itself is similar to a lawn, quite lightweight and drapey.
Were all 1930s prints small little dingbats like the feed sack prints? If you saw this as a dress, would you immediately think of the 1960s? I'm not sure how authentic I'd like to be, but at the very least I want to avoid those "negative" connotations. lol
Kitchy Kitchen "Blueberry," by Robert Kaufman
The blue isn't nearly as navy as it looks on my screen; it's a dark, intense royal blue. From the ruler, you can see that it's a little larger than the swatch on the screen. I like it, because it's simple and colorful (and WHITE, not cream) and more spray-like than flower heads geometrically spaced across the fabric. It made me think of a late 1930s dress, with a fuller, shorter skirt and maybe flutter sleeves. The fabric itself is similar to a lawn, quite lightweight and drapey.
Were all 1930s prints small little dingbats like the feed sack prints? If you saw this as a dress, would you immediately think of the 1960s? I'm not sure how authentic I'd like to be, but at the very least I want to avoid those "negative" connotations. lol