ShoreRoadLady
Practically Family
- Messages
- 742
Tophat Dan said:Overall appearance: The garment is a fitted cloak with a fabric-covered single button at the throat for closure and full lining.
It has a collar, of the type I think is called a "shawl collar". It is four inches wide and is almost exactly like the collar on the shirt in the picture in the link below, only the front points are rounded off.
The picture you showed looks like a flat collar (doesn't rise up to curve around the neck at all, but lays flat on the garment). One with rounded points like you describe would be a Peter Pan collar. A shawl collar looks something like this. (Why yes, I did have to identify a bunch of collar types in college! Why do you ask?)
I found the source of the torn stitches I heard though: A six inch portion of a lining seam let go. Fluffy old cotton thread that got tired of doing its job apparently. No cloth damage at all and can be repaired very simply.
Glad to hear the problem was just a seam! Now she can get it repaired and wear it.
Lining fabric (also black):
Most likely satin, though not of the super slippery, shiny type. It makes quite a rustle when you carry the garment around. There is no shattering or other weird decay on it that would make me think it was silk. Maybe it's cotton based as well?
Is it taffeta, maybe? Taffeta has a duller shine to it, feels matte (for lack of a better word), is stiffer and less slippery than satin, and most importantly - it rustles. A lot. Depending on the era, taffeta could be made of silk, or any of a variety of manmade fibers.
Now let me display my dating ignorance : From the covered button and the Peter Pan collar, my uneducated guess places it at the 20s at the earliest, although it really sounds like something 30s-50s. The collar especially doesn't strike me as either Edwardian or Victorian.