Image:1807-pseudo1740 Fashion-contrast Bombazine-pun.jpg

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Wikimedia Commons logo This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons. The description on its description page there is shown below.
Commons is attempting to create a freely licensed media file repository. You can help.

[edit] Summary

"The Fashions of the Day, or Time Past and Present, Respectfully dedicated to the Fashionable Editors of La Belle Assemblé, Le Beau Monde &c. &c.", an 1807 caricature engraved by Charles Williams after a drawing by Woodward, which presents an (exaggerated) contrast between "The Year 1740: A Lady's full dress of Bombazeen" (i.e. bombazine or bombasine, a heavy corded fabric) and "The year 1807: ..." (well, you can read the rest yourself):

Note that "undress" didn't mean anything naughty -- there's a definition of it here.[1] In pursuing his goal of satirizing certain features of contemporary 1807 fashions, the caricaturist did not really draw a fair comparison between the styles of 1740 and 1807, since a young Regency fashionable is juxtaposed here to a sedate middle-aged pre-Regency lady (perhaps in mourning), and such features of mid-18th century dress as tight stiff stays with extremely low necklines were not included (also, the "1740" costume actually seems to be somewhat of a pastiche with 17th century styles).

(Women's fashions of the Empire/Regency weren't always "sensible", but their excesses do seem to be more in accord overall with the spirit of the 21st century than the fashion excesses of most other periods between the 16th century and World War I, which tended to go in for such things as huge hoopskirts and tight corsets...)


Bibliographic information found on the Library of Congress site:

TITLE: The fashions of the day, or time past and time present / Woodward delt. ; W. sculpt.

CALL NUMBER: PC 3 - 1807--Fashions of the day ... (A size) [P&P]

REPRODUCTION NUMBER: LC-USZ62-59625 (b&w film copy neg.) No known restrictions on publication.

SUMMARY: Print shows a woman from "the year (1740) a Ladys full dress of Bombazeen", wearing a dark, padded, armor-like dress contrasted to a woman from "the year (1807) a Ladys undress of Bum-be-seen" wearing a light, revealing, diaphanous dress.

MEDIUM: 1 print : aquatint, hand-colored.

CREATED/PUBLISHED: [London] : Published by Walker, No. 7 Cornhill, 1807 Nov. 2d.

CREATOR: Woodward, G. M. (George Moutard), ca. 1760-1809, artist.

NOTES: Title from item. "Respectfuly Dedicated to the Fashionable Editors of La Belle Assemblée - Le Beau Monde &c &c." Forms part of: British Cartoon Collection (Library of Congress).

SUBJECTS:

  • Dresses--1800-1810.
  • Dresses--1740.
  • Women--Clothing & dress--England--1800-1810.
  • Women--Clothing & dress--England--1740.

FORMAT: Then & now comparisons 1800-1810. Satires (Visual works) British 1800-1810. Aquatints British Hand-colored 1800-1810.

REPOSITORY: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA

DIGITAL ID: (b&w film copy neg.) cph 3b07367 http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/cph.3b07367

CARD #: 2003675458


[edit] Licensing

Public domain This image (or other media file) is in the public domain because its copyright has expired.

This applies to the United States, Canada, the European Union and those countries with a copyright term of life of the author plus 70 years.


العربية ǀ Български ǀ Català ǀ Česky ǀ Dansk ǀ Deutsch ǀ English ǀ Ελληνικά ǀ Esperanto ǀ Español ǀ Euskara ǀ فارسی ǀ Français ǀ Galego ǀ עברית ǀ हिन्दी ǀ Bahasa Indonesia ǀ Italiano ǀ 日本語 ǀ 한국어 ǀ Kurdî / كوردي ǀ Nederlands ǀ Norsk (nynorsk) ǀ Bahasa Melayu ǀ Polski ǀ Português ǀ Русский ǀ Slovenščina ǀ Shqip ǀ Suomi ǀ Svenska ǀ Türkçe ǀ 简体中文 ǀ 正體中文 ǀ +/-

The following pages on the English Wikipedia link to this file (pages on other projects are not listed):