Re: [h-cost] Great Trip!!!

2011-03-21 Thread Lynn Downward
This is all great information, Penny. It sounds as if you had a wonderful
trip.

My brother-in-law was working in Biloxi in one of the riverboat gambling
house/theaters on the coast before Katrina. He managed to get his wife and
newborn daughter out of the state just in time. When he went back to see if
they could salvage any of their things from their first floor apartment, he
found his place of business in the middle of the freeway and a high water
mark a few inches below the ceiling of his apartment. Very little was
saveable. This certainly wasn't historic stuff. I hope Biloxi's museum can
recover.

LynnD

On Sun, Mar 20, 2011 at 2:41 AM, penn...@costumegallery.com wrote:

 New Orleans: I am back from Mardi Gras!  OMG!!!  Wait until you see the
 photos and video!  Zulu's costumes were great!  I am working on them now.
  I
 asked one of the Zulu paraders to stop so that I could photograph him.  Got
 the photo and he gave me the most treasured item of Mardi Gras...the golden
 coconut!

 I also got to see Pete Fountain and the cast of HBO's series Treme...Steve
 Zahn is as crazy as on the show. All the cast was on the float.   I was so
 excited to see Pete Fountain.  I grew up hearing his music.  I did get a
 close-up view of the Comus Queen.  I watched on TV the toast of Comus and
 Rex and their trains were so plain in comparison to Mobile's MG royalty.

 Mobile:  I got lots of photos of Joe Cain's Merry Widows.  There is a lot
 of
 history behind the story.  The Widows were so thrilled that someone from
 Virginia came to photograph them.  One of the widows, my favorite, was
 wearing a bustle dress.  After the funeral, a man went down on one knee and
 she pulled up her skirt and he took off her garter.  She also smoked a
 large
 cigar.  What a ham!  The Merry Widows wore large Edwardian, Merry Widows
 style.  Their prize throw was a cup with their signature trinkets, emblem
 necklace, doubloons, and a garter.  Guess who gave it to me...Mrs. Bustle.
 They also give out black silk roses...I got a rose from each widow and wove
 them into a wreath for my head.. The Widows were a true story!  Nine widows
 showed up at the real Joe Cain funeral.

 The Widows always started the Joe Cain Mardi Gras parade in their special
 float.  My sister noticed some ladies stationed in front of their
 float--all
 dressed in nice, some sexy red dresses.  I flashed my press pass to
 investigate who they were and photograph them.  Six years ago these ladies
 showed up at the parade all wearing red.  They call themselves Joe Cain's
 Mistresses.  They saw my black rose wreath and said, You need some red in
 that!  They gave me some red roses for the wreath.  I hand carried the
 wreath everywhere, even on the airplane.

 While in Mobile, I took more photos at the Mobile Carnival Museum.  After a
 big search for the location of the local history archive library, we found
 it with two hours to spare.   I am researching descriptions of the kings
 and
 queens costumes back to the 1920s.  So much thought was put into each train
 to reflect their family history, personalities, hobbies, religions, etc.
  We
 did pull newspaper articles with the descriptions for two years.  A BIG
 bonus was an article about a designer who created 25 robes/trains for 25
 Kings  queens from 1909-1950s.  She made all of the trains with a treadle
 sewing machine.  I will be back in Mobile late May through mid-June for my
 son's wedding.  I hope that I time to pull more research.

 I did find out that the museum's lower floor was flooded during Hurricane
 Katrina.  They lost some of their 1960s kings  queens regalia.  I pray
 that
 we can find our master copy of the video were shot in 1999 with these
 costumes.  It has to be somewhere in our house.  We have been tearing the
 house apart to find it.  I did photograph a 1961 Queen train  crown this
 visit.

 Sadly, Biloxi's Mardi Gras Museum is still not open.  They are working on
 the historic mansion that housed the collection.  The museum was under 20
 ft. of water during Hurricane Katrina.  Their costumes were sent to
 Jackson,
 Mississippi to try to restore them.

 Penny Ladnier, owner
 The Costume Gallery Websites
 www.costumegallery.com
 15 websites of fashion, costume, and textile history
 FaceBook:
 http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Costume-Gallery-Websites/107498415961579

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Re: [h-cost] Great Trip!!!

2011-03-21 Thread Sharon Collier
OK, What is the Golden Coconut and why is it special?
Sharon, who is dying of curiosity 

-Original Message-
From: h-costume-boun...@indra.com [mailto:h-costume-boun...@indra.com] On
Behalf Of penn...@costumegallery.com
Sent: Sunday, March 20, 2011 2:42 AM
To: 'Historical Costume'
Subject: [h-cost] Great Trip!!!

New Orleans: I am back from Mardi Gras!  OMG!!!  Wait until you see the
photos and video!  Zulu's costumes were great!  I am working on them now.  I
asked one of the Zulu paraders to stop so that I could photograph him.  Got
the photo and he gave me the most treasured item of Mardi Gras...the golden
coconut!  

I also got to see Pete Fountain and the cast of HBO's series Treme...Steve
Zahn is as crazy as on the show. All the cast was on the float.   I was so
excited to see Pete Fountain.  I grew up hearing his music.  I did get a
close-up view of the Comus Queen.  I watched on TV the toast of Comus and
Rex and their trains were so plain in comparison to Mobile's MG royalty.

Mobile:  I got lots of photos of Joe Cain's Merry Widows.  There is a lot of
history behind the story.  The Widows were so thrilled that someone from
Virginia came to photograph them.  One of the widows, my favorite, was
wearing a bustle dress.  After the funeral, a man went down on one knee and
she pulled up her skirt and he took off her garter.  She also smoked a large
cigar.  What a ham!  The Merry Widows wore large Edwardian, Merry Widows
style.  Their prize throw was a cup with their signature trinkets, emblem
necklace, doubloons, and a garter.  Guess who gave it to me...Mrs. Bustle.
They also give out black silk roses...I got a rose from each widow and wove
them into a wreath for my head.. The Widows were a true story!  Nine widows
showed up at the real Joe Cain funeral.

The Widows always started the Joe Cain Mardi Gras parade in their special
float.  My sister noticed some ladies stationed in front of their float--all
dressed in nice, some sexy red dresses.  I flashed my press pass to
investigate who they were and photograph them.  Six years ago these ladies
showed up at the parade all wearing red.  They call themselves Joe Cain's
Mistresses.  They saw my black rose wreath and said, You need some red in
that!  They gave me some red roses for the wreath.  I hand carried the
wreath everywhere, even on the airplane.

While in Mobile, I took more photos at the Mobile Carnival Museum.  After a
big search for the location of the local history archive library, we found
it with two hours to spare.   I am researching descriptions of the kings and
queens costumes back to the 1920s.  So much thought was put into each train
to reflect their family history, personalities, hobbies, religions, etc.  We
did pull newspaper articles with the descriptions for two years.  A BIG
bonus was an article about a designer who created 25 robes/trains for 25
Kings  queens from 1909-1950s.  She made all of the trains with a treadle
sewing machine.  I will be back in Mobile late May through mid-June for my
son's wedding.  I hope that I time to pull more research.

I did find out that the museum's lower floor was flooded during Hurricane
Katrina.  They lost some of their 1960s kings  queens regalia.  I pray that
we can find our master copy of the video were shot in 1999 with these
costumes.  It has to be somewhere in our house.  We have been tearing the
house apart to find it.  I did photograph a 1961 Queen train  crown this
visit.

Sadly, Biloxi's Mardi Gras Museum is still not open.  They are working on
the historic mansion that housed the collection.  The museum was under 20
ft. of water during Hurricane Katrina.  Their costumes were sent to Jackson,
Mississippi to try to restore them.

Penny Ladnier, owner
The Costume Gallery Websites
www.costumegallery.com
15 websites of fashion, costume, and textile history
FaceBook:
http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Costume-Gallery-Websites/107498415961579 

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Re: [h-cost] Great Trip!!!

2011-03-21 Thread penny1a
Sharon,

From Zulu's website and the history of the parade and their costumes: 
http://www.kreweofzulu.com/history/ 

Of all the throws to rain down from the many floats in the parades during
carnival, the Zulu coconut or Golden Nugget is the most sought after. The
earliest reference to the coconut appears to be about 1910 when the coconuts
were given from the floats in their natural hairy state. Some years later
there is a reference to Lloyd Lucus, the sign painter, scraping and
painting the coconuts. This, in all likelihood, was the forerunner to the
beautifully decorated coconuts we see today.

With the proliferation of lawsuits from people alleging injury from thrown
coconuts, the organization was unable to get insurance coverage in 1987. So
that year, the honored tradition was suspended. After much lobbying, the
Louisiana Legislature passed SB188, aptly dubbed the Coconut Bill, which
excluded the coconut from liability for alleged injuries arising from the
coconuts handed from the floats. On July 8, 1988, then-governor Edwards
signed the bill into law.

Zulu's costumes are from simple grass skirts to massive elaborate feathered
back boards like in Rio worn by the court.  The most famous King Zulu was
Louis Armstrong.  The men in the parade wear black face makeup.

Penny Ladnier, owner
The Costume Gallery Websites
www.costumegallery.com
15 websites of fashion, costume, and textile history
FaceBook:
http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Costume-Gallery-Websites/107498415961579 

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