--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 03/03/2006 19:15 wrote:
The reference you are thinking of comes from chapter 10 of 'Frederica' by
Georgette Heyer.
[snip]
... and the little Alexandrian cap with which, deaf to Charis's protests,
she completed her elegant toilette,
clearly
Please do, it was the only thing wrong with the pictures, that we couldn't
enlarge them to see details better.
It looks like it was a lovely weekend, I'm glad you had a great time.
Joannah
~*~ Practice random acts of kindness, and senseless acts of beauty. ~*~
--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
One of the things I learned in my studies was that legally, clothing
manufacturers have to put a care label on their garments, and they
have to
test the garment in what ever method they recommend.
Not that all manufacturer's actually _test_ the garments ... I think
Tommy Hilfiger still
That has certainly been my take on it for years! The so called care label
puts the blame on the owner or outside establishment if the garment fails to
survive the cleaning.
Besides the Talon (zipper) ads, remember the Union Label (buy American!)
ads when all the new fibers began to come out in
Both of the Mums in our household are going through the change, we have hand
fans stashed everywhere in our re enacting kit! Most of them are the
sandlewood variety.
Kelly
Okay ladies... how many of you have had hot flashes and found that your hand
fans are your new best friend?
Maybe a
I was thinking shoulder strap too...It sound like you may have to unpick the
strap seam, and take up the front shoulder at an angle from it's original,
not touching the original back shoulder seam. You may also want to
interline the bodice with your interlining cut so the shoulder strap is on
This group of a single gartered, lace covered leg, provocatively extended
from various froths of silk skirts and petticoat. There are 5! each one
more delicious than the other...
A very cute idea.
kathleen
- Original Message -
From: Gail Scott Finke [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL
Hi--
I was a designer / patternmaker and technical designer in the garment
industry for 24 years. Do not blame the manufacturer (the people who
actually sew the garment) for the wording of care labels. Very often the
people who make the garment follow what is demanded by the Customer (the
people
The setting is just aweson. It looks like so much funif you get
time, could you link the pictures to their larger form? There are some
details that would be fun to look at. Speaking of which what is on the
man's pony-tail in the picture: last column, second row. Is it wrapped
in ribbon?
For whatever reason, it doesn't cause any discomfort. It is a very
comfortable brait does cause an odd shape for the modern taste though!
Land of Oz wrote:
I would think the ugly seam that runs right across the nipple is
going to cause you some serious discomfort if you ride for very
Bjarne:
Wow! 100% silk! It looks so good in the pictures, it must have been amazing
in real life. What a wonderful time you must have had.
If I ever recreated that time period, I would have to be a servant! I would
want everything to be perfect, not just like the real thing. But I think I
could
Hi Saragrace,
I am working on it right now, and more pictures two. I didnt have many of
myself, because it was me who took the photos, but today i received many
nice pictures with me also. Post them in a coupple of hours.
The gentleman is having his tail wrapped round with a silk ribbon. It was
Over the years I have found that most of my creative associations seem to have
at least two or three similarities in other areas as well as the shared
interest in which we first became aquainted.
I have noticed several list members make reference to horses and riding. I
ride and own
Thank you for all the great responses! Now I know I can create some nice things
that are going to be easy and a lot less expensive to care for. Might try
washing that natural colored linen blouse too.
The other direction this took reminds me of how I ruined a dry clean only
jacket that
In a message dated 3/6/2006 11:57:00 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
The other direction this took reminds me of how I ruined a dry clean only
jacket that was one of my favorites by following label directions. The fabric
was fine - it was the lining material that
This is what I understood back in the '50s. The ads about
'non-shrinking/misshaping were placed by the WGWU, as you can still find
their label in older garments. That was their hallmark about buying quality
fabric. It seems that when Fashion (the customer/business ordering) took
prescidence on
Annette and others-
Can we make a subgroup that deals with riding outfits and horse items?
I'd hate to not get feedback from all the historical costumers on the
big list, but I don't want to annoy the rest of you with horse
specific questions. Is it Ok to post with the type of Subject line
Leah L Watts wrote:
I've always suspected Do Not Wash, Do Not Dry Clean, Spot Clean Only
was a synonym for We Couldn't Be Bothered To Test This But Don't Want To
Be Held Responsible.
I picked up a gorgeous fully beaded and sequinned evening gown at a
local thrift shop with just such a tag.
-Original Message-
Annette and others-
Can we make a subgroup that deals with riding outfits and horse items?
Personally, I am right there with you on the costuming for riders and
horses. I own a horse farm that does classical riding (Dressage, Combined
Training, Jumpers) but, I do
Hi,
Shameless of me, i uploaded the first clickable pictures with the ones of
myself. Its so seldom i had any pictures of me wearing the blue suit, and
also my humble mundane.
http://www.my-drewscostumes.dk/soiredhiver3.htm
Bjarne
Leif og Bjarne Drews
www.my-drewscostumes.dk
Hi,
I was wondering who all from the list was thinking of going. Or who
would be lecturing there. Anyone?
I notice that there's still next to no info available on the website,
just a couple months out now, and I was wondering if I should be
worried. Or do these things always pull themselves
Susan Data-Samtak [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Annette and others-
Can we make a subgroup that deals with riding outfits and horse items?
I'd hate to not get feedback from all the historical costumers on the
big list, but I don't want to annoy the rest of you with horse
specific questions. Much
On Mon, 6 Mar 2006, Dawn wrote:
I was wondering who all from the list was thinking of going. Or who
would be lecturing there. Anyone?
Alas, not me this year. It's within driving distance, but bad timing.
I notice that there's still next to no info available on the website,
just a couple
I know I had seen some around. I tripped on this page:
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Maternity_corset
Mostly later eras from where I was asking about
originally, but a neat selection of how it was
handled.
Kathy
Ermine, a lion rampant tail nowed gules charged on the shoulder with a
From what I've been able to find out: he short version of Astride vs
Aside:
WOMEN rode any way they could-if they were able to get a horse to ride.
They either walked or maybe were able to catch a ride in a wagon.
LADIES, on the other hand, adhered to strict rules of conduct and kept
From the sound of the story, an Alexanderian cap is a dowager's cap. What I
have been told of dowager's caps (take this with a cup o' salt) is that they
are similar to the Whistler's mother cap but slightly different and fancier
(lacey?).
___
LADIES, on the other hand, adhered to strict rules of conduct and kept
their legs together for propriety. I know there are pictures of
females riding astride as well as
sideways with their back parallel to
the right side of the horse and their feet at right angles to the
horse's left side.
From my reading, I've come across the term pillion, which I always
understood to mean behind the main rider, but never knew if it meant
sideways or astride.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Susan Data-Samtak
Sent: Monday, March 06, 2006
At 10:40 AM -0600 3/5/06, Betsy Marshall wrote:
My information is that dry cleaning helps preserve the fabric treatments
used by the manufacturer- either fabric or clothing processes; so fabric of
wool, linen, silk or combinations thereof, _can_ be washed, just be prepared
for the
I am always looking for funny color names. OPI has some 2006 nail polish
colors names! Check these out:
Reds:
*** I'm Not Really a Waitress
*** Nice Color, Eh?
*** O'Hare Nails Look Great!
*** SoHo Nice to Meet You
*** You Rock-apulco Red
*** My Chihuahua Bites! (my favorite)
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