#1890s tea gown
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Silver silk tea gown, 1894, French.
Designed by Jean-Philippe Worth.
Met Museum.
#silver#womenswear#extant garments#tea gown#1890s tea gown#silk#19th century#1890s#1890s France#1894#france#met museum#jean Philippe worth#house of worth
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Silk chiffon tea gown
c. 1895-1905
Chertsey Museum
#omgggg#tea gown#fashion history#historical fashion#Victorian fashion#Victorian#1890s#Edwardian fashion#Edwardian#history of fashion#frostedmagnolias#black
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Tea gown in embroidered cotton and machine-made lace by Jacques Doucet for actress Réjane, ca. 1898.
Pallais Galliera
#jacquest doucet#historical fashion#late 19th century#1890s fashion#réjane#dress#tea gown#gown#white#lace#cotton#paleta post
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was torn about what decade to make the romulans. but i wanted to draw 1890s not 1940s. and the shoulder pads abide
#I was halfway thru this when I thought of Romulan velocipedienne uniform and wanted to scream#WHUOOOOAAAAAAAAAH YEAHHH BABY THATS ITT#anyways you know romulans and cardassians have a rivalry about who the better tailors are#Vulcans can… they can wear 1890s reform tea gowns everywhere…#dee s 9#what if I just make.. a whole line of these plates……. And put them on redbubble or somethin…#i hate that their bangs are so high up lol it looks like i cant draw bangs for shit. i promise i usually can
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Fashion Plate- Le Costume Moderne 1897
#plate#fashion plate#fashion#tea gown#1890s fashion#1890s#historical#historical fashion#victorian#victorian era#victorian fashion#historical clothing#historical dress#history#long dress#artwork#art#19th century fashion#19th century#late 19th century#1800s dress#late 1800s#1800s#fashion dress#dresses#dress#the gilded age#high fashion#victorian history#victorian dress
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Tea gown of Empress Maria Feodorovna, 1890. State Hermitage Museum.
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La Mode illustrée, no. 49, 4 décembre 1898, Paris. Toilette de visites. Élégante robe d'intérieur. Modèles de Mmes Coussinet-Piret, rue Richer, 43. Ville de Paris / Bibliothèque Forney
#La Mode illustrée#19th century#1890s#1898#periodical#fashion#fashion plate#Forney#dress#visiting#house#collar#lace#gown#dressing#tea#Modèles de chez#Madames Coussinet-Piret
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I can’t be bothered taking a better picture so here is my outfit.
I made the belt and my petticoat but the outfit is from Gibson Girl Dress on Etsy.
It’s my Birthday! I’m officially the age of the dancing queen. I’m having a tea party and I’ll attach some images of my outfit later
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The blending of shades between yellow & black in ombré stripes gives the impression that this early 1890s tea gown is glowing, fired by some unseen force to blaze across the skirt. It is a tea gown that cries out for an audience. Emile Pingat. National Gallery of Australia.
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Tea Gown
c. 1891
“This tea gown, composed of a cut-up wool shawl woven in a paisley pattern, imitates a black-centered Indian Kashmir shawl. In fact, the material was probably woven in France during the 1860s or 1870s. On the upper right corner of the bodice is embroidered "Cachemire" in white thread. Such a tea gown, intended for gender-segregated leisure, is the feminine analogue to the man's dressing gown or smoking jacket.”
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
#tea gown#historical fashion#fashion history#history of fashion#historical clothing#dress history#1890s#19th century fashion#frostedmagnolias#textiles#textile
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Wails of Wedded Bliss
Chapter 2 || Masterlist || Chapter 4
Chapter Summary: After finding his debts you decide to take matters into your own hands...what a terrible decision...
Pairing: Sherlock Homes x wife!reader
Chapter Warnings: 18+ Dead Dove Do Not Eat, Dubious Consent, Historical Typical Sexism, Debts, Domestic Abuse, Sexual Abuse, Blackmail.
Word Count: 9k
Author Notes:
★For those of you possibly turning around and saying “£290 is nothing for all of what Sherlock has bought”
...I’ll remind you this is set in 1890 and so since then inflation has risen greatly...
★So for the modern reader I must insist to explain that £290 in England is now worth £30,671...
★And for my American readers that would be $38,948
★And for my Australian readers that would be $58,490
★Basically...Sherlock Holmes is a material gorl 💅
Inspiring Song: "Ghiribizzi" by Paganini
•❈•≫≪•❈•≫≪•❈•≫≪•❈•≫≪•❈•≫≪•❈•
7:35am Tuesday 6th May 1890, 221B Baker Street, Marylebone, Westminster, London, England.
You wobbled onto your feet as Mrs Hudson entered the apartment with a scowl... probably because of something Sherlock said to her in passing the stairs.
The old crow’s frown spirited away when she noticed you were awake and outside of your bedroom.
She smiled warmly in fact and bid you a good morning. You returned the expression as she came and collected the breakfast plates.
Your fingers trailed over the countless of papers on the table and the sleek wood of his violin.
Shuffling through each parchment and a sigh drawled from your lips.
“Mrs Hudson,” you hummed as she passed you, “I request you show me the expenses of the household purse.”
It was a common duty of a wife nowadays to keep track of all home expenses.
She paused and her eyes widened, her mouth flapped open and closed quickly again. Her teeth grimaced and her bony finger wagged, “I am afraid my dear, they are in Mr Holmes bedroom, and as I said yesterday, he can be an incredibly private person.”
His bedroom? Oh yes...he kept it locked. But by god you needed to get to the bottom of this theory you were building in your mind. You were married and a married couple shouldn’t withhold secrets.
“I am his wife, I am the second close thing to the holy trinity in his life now,” you snorted softly as you collected all the papers on the table and made a neat single pile, “I will see the documents and understand his predicament.”
“And which predicament may that be?” the housekeeper inquired as she laid down a fresh virgin cup to pour scolding tea from the hot teapot.
“Enola mentioned something about debts,” You clutched the front of your dressing gown to contain some decorum while you sat back down and gestured to the chair beside you for her to sit in as well, “his foul dismissal of my presence suggests not only disdain of our union but in addition a set of a secrecy and disfavour I will not permit in my marriage.”
You needed to know exactly how much debt he was in. You were willing to part some of your dowry to pay for it if you could. His aggression was surely caused by the stress of these debt...if you could lift them off his shoulders, mayhaps he would be kinder, gentle and respectful.
She passed you the cup and saucer while she took to pouring herself a cup. The elder woman smiled giddily.
You were pleased that there was no judgement of your modesty before her. It was a fine change compared to your strictly grandmother who would berate you if you dared leave your bedroom under dressed.
The elder cradled her cup and lowered it carefully, clearing her throat, “Mrs Holmes...”
You blinked...you believed you had asked her to not call you by your new name, out of friendliness.
“Mrs Hudson?” you queerly answered.
“Before your marriage,” her lip curled inward and her fingers lightly tapped her cup, she looked to the tea and quickly glanced up at you, “The detective entertained himself in some...appalling activities. I think it best not to open those locked pasts for your own sake.”
Appalling activities...in a world of proprietary that could mean anything...you did have your thoughts...you were only surprised that the notorious detective would risk tainting his reputation with some illicit practice.
You swallowed dryly before sipping lightly at the tea. You licked your lips and sighed shaking your head, “Speak plainly Mrs Hudson.”
“Oh please,” She prayed mortifyingly, “I daren’t repeat it.”
It wasn’t difficult to see the pink rising in the pale wrinkled face of Mrs Hudson.
You leant over the table and used small tongs to pick up a sugar cube and clenched your jaw. You wouldn’t play in another game of riddles, especially not with a elder woman with a privacy for embarrassing details. The sugar fell into the cup with a soft plop in the awkward silence, a ticking of the clock caught in your ear.
“Tell me or leave Mrs Hudson,” you pinched the papers on the desk , “I have documents to find and unless your words hold any meaning, do not bore me with unheard gossip.”
Her beady blue eyes under her spectacles fluttered, her lips parted at your stern tone. She inhaled deeply and looked around the room before leaning in closer to you.
She said in a hushed whisper, “My dear girl, your husband is a whore mongering, drug addicted gambler.”
Now that was a surprise to hear fall from her wrinkled lips. You pinched your forehead and rubbed thoughtfully. How would you handle this type of man?
You glanced at her with a small grin.
“Was- Mrs Hudson,” You corrected, tapping the table with your knuckle, “I will not allow such boyish whims into my marriage,” you wagged your finger at her and flashed her a devious smile, “He shall need to divorce me if he wishes to continue such behaviours, it might be harder for me to remarry but I trust not a single woman would last longer than me as his wife.”
A small laugh came out of the woman who gave you a dramatic military salute, she grinned and chortled, “Well, I admire your determination, but however will you enter his chambers? He has the only key.”
Your chest deflated, she was right. How would you? You chewed the inside of your cheek and looked over your shoulder to look at the closed bedroom door on the far side of the wall beside your own.
You slowly pushed up to your feet again and trapesed back to your bedroom, “Mrs Hudson, wherever did you put my hat box?”
The elderly woman put down her cup and swayed inside to follow you, she pointed to above the wardrobe. Standing on your toes you palmed the box down and laid it on your unmade bed.
Mrs Hudson was opening up your wardrobe and peeling through your hanging hooks of dresses and coats.
“My dear, surely you’re not intending to go outside in your frail condition?” she muttered as she trailed a fresh chemise over her arm.
Shaking your head you jerked you chin, “No Mrs Hudson, indoors I will remain.” Your hand clenched your lower belly with a hiss as a nasty cramp prevailed, “I don’t recall entirely but I believe a doctor was here last night, said I have begun my menses for this month.”
“I can see dearest,” Mrs Hudson hummed, pinching at your dressing gown...you had bled through it. A wet crimson patch stained the white cotton. You balked and flushed.
“Best get it off now,” Mrs Hudson winked, pulling it back and off your naked shoulders, “I’ll make you some packing.”
You shuddered and gasped at how forward your housekeeper was presenting. Respectfully speaking, you wondered if Mrs Hudson had been a ladies maid in her earlier years before her own marriage.
You tiptoed to the water basin on the vanity and squeezed the clean cloth inside of it. You cleaned the red and burgundy chunks and stream between your thighs. Your washed your hands back in the water and faced Mrs Hudson sheepishly. She smiled and pulled the chemise over your head.
“Let me roll some packing,” she said, pulling a bandage from the top drawer of the vanity and folded it into a flat palm of thickened fabric.
You shoved it up against your intimate flesh and squeezed your thighs together tightly.
Mrs Hudson then found a sanitary apron in the same drawer and helped tie it behind your back.
“Mrs Hudson you are a fine woman of elegance and saintly kindness,” you exhaled, “Thank you.”
“I remember when I was a freshly married girl,” She clucked happily, “My dear friend was a constant visitor and helped me with these things. Mr Hudson grew very jealous of our time together,” she sighed, “Now, do you require a corset my dear?”
You shook your head and plucked your fingers, “I shan’t accept any visitors, and in my sickly state it would be kinder to leave it be if I should make a mess of my inconvenience.”
If your stomach threw up from the stress of your internal curse, you didn’t want to wash through the delicate fabrics of your whale bone undergarments.
You found a loose blouse and black skirt to pull and button onto your body. You pulled up a pair of stockings.
You sat on the bed as Mrs Hudson buttoned your shoes up with a hook. As the kind older woman did this gradually with her small fingers and greying eyes, you pulled the lid of your hat box away.
You pulled out a long metal stick...
A sharp hat pin.
“There we are, all done and ready for the day!” the housekeeper announced, rising to her feet.
You rose up with her and smiled, “Please Mrs Hudson, might I burden you with making another pot of tea?”
She beamed and nodded.
•❈•≫≪•❈•≫≪•❈•≫≪•❈•≫≪•❈•≫≪•❈•
08:45am Tuesday 6th May 1890, 221B Baker Street, Marylebone, Westminster, London, England.
You were grunting on your knees before Sherlock’s locked door. Your hat pin jammed into the key hole. The tip of your tongue stuck out the corner of your lips as you shuffled the metal and tried to carefully listen to the locking of the inner gears.
Little did anyone know...this little talent you learnt on your own... Breaking into your grandfathers wine cellar was not a overexerting task when you were fifteen. It wasn’t a desire to rebel, rather a desire to educate yourself...you wanted to be seen as intelligent and knew your wines.
It wasn’t too long before you came to hate the bitter taste...and then found your grandfather’s rum drum.
When he found you, he didn’t not strike you and decided the headache you received in the morning was punishment enough for your sinful deed. And for a whole week he made you drink a cup of the stuff every night, to teach you why alcoholism was not befitting for a lady...
You smirked at the memory. Perhaps it was unorthodox. But it was kinder than a lashing or earful from your grandmother.
It was just one of many secrets between the both of you.
The loud click and sliding of the last inner lock made your eyes sparkle. As you twisted the handle the door peeled open with a awful squeak.
“My lord, what a mess!” you gasped.
The room was in a disarray. A smell of mould and death hit your nose. You gagged and felt your belly churn.
There was cigar burns in the rug, papers, news papers and books thrown about. There were plates that were piled up in the corner on a desk and there was a dirt dried mud trails...
The curtains were stained and the dust was unbelievable. When your finger ran along a small stand beside the door your finger came back looking pitch black with the soot.
You sat back and stood up. Piece by piece you picked up all the papers and went to his filing cabinet drawer, it was empty! Of course it was empty, all the contents had been tossed about, decorating the room messily.
You fingered the massive haul of papers and sighed, you would need to organise them all...
Taking them back out to the dining table you started to arrange piles of parchment stacks. Receipts, paid and unpaid, by date and purchases. Your eyes catered to the numbers, you fetched a notebook to tally the expenses and sighed, cupping your mouth every so often at his choices of spending.
You were so caught up in your own thoughts and game of pounds, shillings and pence, you hadn’t heard the return of Mrs Hudson with a fresh pot and tea set.
“Dear me,” she said clicking her tongue and shaking her head, “It looks like you’ve got your work cut out! Now what’s all this?” She asked picking up a receipt off a pile.
Rolling your shoulders back she smiled proudly at the organisation of affairs. You gestured to the individual sheet stacks.
“Ah sings Den, Cocaine Tooth Drops, Black Shag Tobacco, gambling...prostitutes,” you chewed your lip worriedly as you glance back at the small note book you write on with a blunt pencil, “He has wracked up a wicked sum...”
The housekeeper put the receipt back and sat beside you after pouring you another warm tea, this time she added the sugar cube for you and stirred.
“How much?” She whispered looking over the thick almost book like mountains of papers.
Since the new year began...Sherlock had designed quite the irresponsible money expenses and debts...
£5.65 for the Opium Den experience.
£3.25 for the Cocaine drops
£10.41 for the tobacco.
£120.78 for the overall gambling.
£150.33 for his Mayfair Row whores to Madam Adler.
Total: £290.42....
You felt your lips tighten, your belly squeezed. You paled and frailly held the cup to your lips, softly blowing and softly stating, “Perhaps that number I will keep to myself Mrs Hudson,” you pushed a pile close to her and tapped at the top, “Be not alarmed however, he seems to dedicate his rent responsibly to you.”
She chortled and shook her head, “Oh I don’t mind that, I trust him to,” her eyes narrowed at the
Mayfair receipts, “I just never liked the company he brought home.”
Your eyes widened and it was like air had been stolen and kicked from your lungs, “He brought...” you choked, shutting your eyes, “Those...those women back here?”
She grit her teeth and finished her tea, “Yes, they leave like newborn foals with wobbly legs.”
When Mrs Hudson caught your worrisome eyes she gasped and tapped your hand softly, “Forgive me, I needn’t provide details.”
You pursed your lips disapprovingly before conceiting, “As much as it is wounding to hear, it is unavoidable,” you sighed and poured yourself another tea, “As his wife it is best I know everything about my husband and if he is to keep secrets from me,” you shrugged, “However shall I be a decent partner?”
Mrs Hudson put her cup aside demurely and leant closer to you. Still in her hushed tones, ashamed of the secrets she was sharing...but her eyes were full of excitement, perhaps this gossip was something she needed off her conscious.
“I would hear them in the night, screaming...I thought he was killing them,” more colour was flushing back into her face. A rosy hue dusted her nose and cheeks, “I am thankful every time when I would see them leave with smiles on their faces.”
You sat back in your chair abruptly and looked at her curiously, “Screaming and smiles?” You whispered under your breath, “How peculiar.”
It wasn’t possible. Did he hurt those prostitutes like how he had done to you? How did they walk away with smiles? Was it because he paid them? Not even you could think how to muster a smile after experiencing such awful tortures.
“I thought perhaps, he did what he had done onto you my dear...but when I saw the blood and your lack of pleasantry, well, I can confidently say-”
You slapped your cup on the saucers hard enough for a loud clatter, you said tightly, “Mrs Hudson I’d very much prefer to forget yesterdays events, if you don’t mind...please do not refer back to them.”
The mention caused a spike of pain inside you, reminding you where he stuck his hot selfish poker.
The elder woman grew quiet for a moment. She looked off at the window in the distance and then down at her cup.
She nodded and tried to share a soft smile, “Apologies for any offence.”
A stab of guilt panged in your chest, you hadn’t mean to be so rude to her. Your nerves were in a terrible mood. In a moment you would be happy and then the next you would feel worrisome and hungry. Perhaps you might’ve grown to be afflicted by the disease of Hysteria?
Oh Hysteria, what a terrible condition...you dreaded the thought of need to go for a medical massage. One of your female cousins had been to one and her description made it sound both enlightening and frightful. In fact she said it felt like she had died and gone to heaven and returned.
All of which made you scared beyond belief.
“None received,” you pat her hand and brought her palm to your lips, “You are a kind Christian and for that I say god bless you Mrs Hudson.”
She smiled warmly and stole a soft kiss to your cheek, all was forgiven between your temper.
“Oh my dear, I must additionally confess,” she stunningly proclaimed, “Sherlock doesn’t attend church.”
Your brows rose, “What?” You snorted through a laugh, unable to comprehend her truth, “Don’t be ridiculous, what upstanding gentleman doesn’t attend church?”
You giggled and cheerfully wiped a tear away, your sanity returned when her face had remained stone solid. She did not find it funny and you realised finally it was because in fact not a joke...
You glanced over the papers...back to the number on your notebook...ah of course...no god fearing man could sin so easily...waste away fortune so carelessly and spend it on unnecessary frivolous activities.
“I think that might be the answer to your own question. The Doctor Watson wrote his newspaper articles and depicted him London’s hero. He can be truly a godless man. Frankly I believe he’s a sadist.”
You tilted your head at her and drank some of your tea.
You hummed and held a finger to your lip in thought, “Yet you said those women had smiles on their faces when they left?”
Mrs Hudson shook her head curtly and smirked, “Well I think I’d smile too with the amount he probably pays them.”
Laying your elbow on the table with your chin on your head you looked at the brothel papers, “You are right...they are over priced...Mayfair Row...they’re quality...but nonetheless still he pays them far too much.”
Your husband was an exuberant tipper when it wasn’t his money. Mayfair Row...you hadn’t been inside the Dove club where Sherlock spent most the wealth...but you knew the average price of a whore...it took you back to a time...many, many years ago...back when you believed you had a mother that loved you...back when seeing a naked man behave like an animal writhing on-top of her was your normal life. Where you mimicked the actions with your cloth doll that you carried everywhere. You tried to remember the name of that doll....Susie? Harriet? God only remembers now.
They weren’t pleasant memories...the stench of mud, the screaming of women, the yelling if men, the bite of hunger and the itch of lice in your hair and fleas covering your clothes.
You shuddered. Thank god you still did not live with her anymore. It was the only life you knew in those days but suffering is suffering and you amazed you how long you survived in such conditions.
The elderly woman looked into the pot and sighed at the low level of tea.
“I am surprised you know so much about them,” she casually noted, glancing back at you.
You realised how strange you must’ve sounded...you heart began to race. You grimaced, annoyed at yourself for being so relaxed you lost thought of your own words.
“Call it a terrible interest Mrs Hudson,” you licked your bottom lip and lied, “I was a reader of Josephine Butler’s work on her dismantlement of child sex work.”
She nodded slowly, clearly Mrs Hudson had no idea who Mrs Butler was...you felt a twinge of agitation for the uneducated.
You tapped your fingers nervously on your cup again and off handedly asked “Do you know if there are anymore receipts I might find Mrs Hudson?”
“No idea I’m afraid,” Mrs Hudson said as she noticed your cup was finally empty. She collected the tea set items and placed them on the tray. You turned in your seat and looked back at Sherlocks open door, there was still so much mess. You shook your head.
Before the housekeeper left you touched her arm.
“Please fetch me a broom and cloth and clean water.”
She followed your gaze at his room and warmly cupped your face, “Dear, perhaps you should lay in bed for a while, you shouldn’t be working so perilously in this physical state.”
You smiled and held her hand, rising out of the chair. You walked back to his room and called over your shoulder, “I would rather clean my husband’s hovel. No wonder he’s a beast considering he lives like one.”
You could hear Mrs Hudson cackling behind you as she went back down stairs only to return with your requested items after a while.
A clean room might clear his head, calm his woes.
•❈•≫≪•❈•≫≪•❈•≫≪•❈•≫≪•❈•≫≪•❈•
12:23pm Tuesday 6th May 1890, 221B Baker Street, Marylebone, Westminster, London, England.
After hours of sweeping, dusting, mopping, washing and organising Sherlock’s room you tiredly flopped back on his mattress and yawn.
At this rate you considered a small nap was required. Except you knew yourself, you knew if you stopped your progress you’d be discouraged to finish.
There was one last thing to organise after folding and hanging all his clothes. At the foot of Sherlock’s bed was a large chest. It could be easily mistaken for an ottoman. Maybe they’re would be more debt documents or clothing in there.
You crawled down and climbed off his bed to crouch beside the chest. You clicked the latches open and lifted the lid slowly.
Inside were sinister objects...you gasped...too shocked to even close the chest. Rope, shackles, knives, long thin sticks, a riding crop, a whip, a bridle you knew deep down was too small for a horse and meant for a human...smaller boxes with printed words....rectal dilators and hysterical paroxysm vibrating aid. And the illustrations...
There was a book you were reading...you weren’t really thinking, you were just curious of the horrid that might follow within...
Men and women, all nude, illustrations and photos of them performing elaborate sexual deviancy. Your eyes widened and your breath caught in your throat. Between your legs the buzz of arousal enlightened to your belly.
There was a woman who was tied up in ropes in star like patterns being mounted by a man who held a riding crop in his hand. You paled thinking he was beating this poor woman...and as you read the words, it was discovered she enjoyed this...took pleasure in the agony??
It was very confusing for you to read such hypocrisy.
Who would enjoy being hurt like this?
And as you read more and more, the deeper into this strange arousal you sunk into.
There was a illustration on a woman holding her lover’s intimate member in her mouth. And another where the same lover was licking with a long snake like tongue at her clitoris.
Your thighs squeezed tight and you groaned as a cramp rippled through your body down to your knees.
Hearing your name on your housekeepers lips tore you away from the novel. You threw the book back inside the chest and shut it hard. You felt short of breath and grasped the wood of his canopy to stay stable before leaving his chambers.
You told yourself that it was wrong to be looking at such art and imagery of lust. A part of you however desired to peak back inside...curiosity was your master and chastity your mistress. So who would you listen to first?
Your eyes fluttered shut.
You met the elderly woman out in the sitting room where she was dusting at the unlit fireplace mantle... She was moving little trinkets and photos.
Within the centre of the mantle stand was a frame containing your own portrait. You had the image taken at a tintype shop over a year ago. You stood beside Mrs Hudson as you took in the reflection of yourself. You smiled at how brilliant it captured your likeness. You were still confused how it worked, something about sand and light...your grandfather stood aside that day and said he would be sending the image to his son to remind him of you, his daughter...you were embarrassed to say the least but dared not argue with his wisdom.
Well it seems your father didn’t get the photo...or perhaps he send it back. Now Sherlock had it in his ownership.
She smiled at you and ran a hand softly down your back and said, “I just wanted to ask if you liked mutton dear, I hope to cook some this evening for dinner.”
You smiled with relief, you told her, “I am ever grateful for any food you provide my husband and I, thankyou Mrs Holmes.”
The elderly woman eyes widened with joy. She turned on her heel, taking the bucket and cloth with her.
You looked over at the table covered in receipts she had kindly left untouched.
“Mrs Hudson,” You called after her as you stepped hastily over to a side board bureau and began to write up a cheque, “is there any chance you will be attending the bank today?”
Facing you she pat the door handle and exclaimed, “No, however I can stop by if you need me to, I am officially in need to buy some fresh mutton from the butcher.”
You smiled at her cheery attitude. You filled out the numbers and printed the expenses. You tore it away from the book and held it out to her.
“Fantastic...here. Take this.”
The housekeeper stepped closer and raced her eyes over the cheque. Her eyes blew up wide at the price you had written out.
“I don’t quite understand...” she shakily stated.
You sighed and clapped your hands as you went to finally sit down on the lounging chaise. It wasn’t hard to admit you needed the rest with how your head spun. You were dizzy and it was possibly from all the cleaning you had conducted and dust you had inhaled.
“Sherlock needs to be rid of these debts and I need to rid of his temper...my dowry Mrs Hudson I pray brings me peace.”
Yes, you were sure of it. Your very expensive dowry...you were going to pay the debt off and help your husband become less of an animal. Perhaps you might convince him to attend church.
“Mrs Holmes,” your housekeeper stammered, “I would advise you hold onto this...please...you cannot just-”
You cut her off dignifiedly, “Mrs Hudson, this cheque card will enter the bank whether by your hand or mine. And before you have insisted I rest. So please if you care enough for me, you shall hand it in on my behalf.”
Her face was flushed and her eyes shut tight. She shook her head disapprovingly while muttering
“Very well dear girl, I hope you know what you are doing.”
Out Mrs Hudson went, and down you went. Your face pressed into a cushion. With your eyes fluttering shut, you feel back into the darkness and peacefully slept, listening to the wafting sounds of Baker Street flow from Sherlock’s bedroom window.
•❈•≫≪•❈•≫≪•❈•≫≪•❈•≫≪•❈•≫≪•❈•
6:00pm Tuesday 6th May 1890, 221B Baker Street, Marylebone, Westminster, London, England.
Sherlock still had not returned home from his morning flee. As Mrs Hudson laid out a plate of roast and potatoes with gravy she assured you that Sherlock had a habit of staying out for hours. Whether for a case or his own pleasures and addiction.
On the table in front of you was the paper bank statement, it accounted that the cheque had been entered and applied to the debts.
Now the Sherlock Holmes was a debt free man...
After you finished your dinner, Mrs Hudson kindly helped remove your shoes and change your bedding. You were redressed in a night gown and over your shoulders a warm dressing gown.
You now only wore a sanitary apron to protect yourself from your blood.
All his paid debt receipts were in a folder, you stared at that manilla folder smugly. Your left it on the table as you went to inspect the book shelves on the far wall near the entrance of the home.
You looked at the many novels on the shelves, now some of them being the ones brought over from your grandparents estate. On quick flicking through pages you found most of them being related to science, language and anatomy. Glancing back at Sherlocks open door, you thought about the book in the chest. That was more than just an anatomy book...
You squeezed your side, you were feeling a spike in temperature and a shortness in breath reimagining those images...those words.
It wasn’t the smut novella Fanny Hill, but it stoked fires inside you much like it. You knew it was something you probably shouldn’t have come across, because you shouldn’t have been inside his room, touching his belongings.
You had to. It smelt like something had died.
You prayed this would sort him out. You could only hope that the years ahead would not be so testing.
You had a list of mental rules. You may be his wife and beneath his status, however you would not just stand back and watch him act a fool and fall victim to further ridicule in society. You would not sink in the same boat again. You were excluded from many balls as a teen when some wicked foul mouth girl had revealed the secrecy of your parentage.
Your step mother was only eleven years older than you, so really...there was no possibility of pretending to be her child. Everyone in high society of they knew you, knew what you were. And because they knew you were treated like a unspeakable burden and unwanted pet at parties.
It wasn’t a mystery to you why you started playing the role of a wallflower at only fifteen.
You refused to allow Sherlock to bring you to such shame in society.
The heavy foot steps outside the close door alerted you to an approach made by someone other than Mrs Hudson.
With the loud snap of the handle and click of the lock, in entered a breathless giant. Sherlock.
He tore off his hat and coat and only after hanging the items on the rack by the door did he acknowledge you with a small nod, “Mrs Holmes,” he bid. Under his arm you noticed was a paper wrapped package.
You heard him march through the house towards the middle room and heard him swear under his breath, follows by a repetitive “no no no.”
You heard him frantically skid around the carpets and floor boards of his own room. He was tearing open and slamming drawers and wardrobe doors.
“What the hell have you done! What have you-?”
Storming out of his room, you gasped at how his face reddened and he continued shouting, but thankfully not at you. He raced to the front door and tore it open screaming down the stairwell,
“Where are you woman!? Mrs Hudson! You shrivelled cow!”
You slapped the book in your hands shut, regarding him disdainfully, “Our housekeeper is not to be rewarded by your insults.”
The turn around he made was slow as realisation came to his heated face. The snarl was replaced by a begrudged sneer as he scoffed, pointing his finger sharply back in the direction of the bedrooms, “...You did this destruction?”
“Destruction?” You whispered. What destruction had you done?
As he approached, you unconsciously took a step back and nervously licked your bottom lip. You felt air being pulled from you as he towered above and stabbed you beneath a invasive gaze.
His darkened eyes looked across the light material of your nightwear. His fingers tugged the book out of hands and pushed it back into the shelving where it belonged.
You decided you needed to stand firmer against him, You craned your head back and stared up at him.
“H-hardly...I have organised. Cleaned.” You took another step back and felt the wood of the display cabinet behind you dig into your waist.
“By subject,” you felt his body press up against you, what the hell was he doing? Trying to intimidate you? You were hardly dressed compared to his full clad attire. It scared you. He looked formidable, like he was going to tear you limb from limb, his nostrils flared. Your insides jumped and that buzzing feeling ran through your lower half. God...why did this of all things arouse you?
Your throat felt shaky, “then- then ah numerical dated followed by alphabetically.”
You glance him over and blinked at the red spot on his chest, was it ink? No, ink isn’t so dark....under Sherlock’s jaw was a scratch, a slight discolouration to his skin and under his hair curl on his forehead as another mark.
He leant down and pressed his mouth to your ear, “Do not ever enter my chambers or touch my belongings without my permission again.” It was a mix between a whisper, an disciplining snarl, and a lusty moan.
It left your knees feeling bloodless. Your own eyes shut closed at the hot breath that breathed into your lobe and hair.
As he pulled back, he stood away and for the first few moments you needed to remember how to control your breathing.
He looked over the dining room table and slid the thick folder closer to himself.
“And what is this?” he asked you.
“Your debts,” You swallowed and wiped your palm across your forehead, a trail of sweat drenched your hand, “Paid for.”
He smirked and shook his head, “Mycroft.”
“No,” you bluntly said, smoothing your hands down your dress to rid of the wrinkles that rose up. Seeing how your nipples had hardened beneath your nightgown you pulled the dressing gown tighter around you and crossed your arms protectively over your chest.
You looked at his body hunched over the table and blinked at the white marks over the edges of his dark navy suit jacket. It looked like flour...except flour had a tendency to clump. His nails were also clean of any baking incredibly. But his finger pads on the wooden table left little faint prints...
“You?” he chuckled condescendingly.
You nodded, “Yes.”
His laughter quickly fell away, his head snapped up fully to look at you, his brows knitted together,
“Why?”
His lips settled into a frown.
He put his hands on his hips, a power play...he was trying to show confidence, dominance...perhaps in response to your arms folded over your chest.
It would’ve been good to just tell him the truth, but to explain it to him would be impossible. You chose to simplify the answer...
“Easement on your consciousness?” You offered dryly. It wasn’t a total like, the less stress, the more relaxing and kindness....right?
His mouth twisted into a snarl, “Why you insufferable little-”
“Where did you go today?,” you pondered, cutting him off from finishing his insult, “A school?”
He jerked back slightly, he tilted his head and narrowed his eyes, he took a deep breath and cupped his hands behind his back, “Excuse me?”
Good, he was calmer now.
This time you took to action...you stepped forward and sighed solemnly pinching one of his vest buttons.
“Chalk, on your cuffs. You smell like sweat in a teenage boy rather than a man. You’ve also had a scuffle with someone much shorter than you from the marks on your neck. Your shirt has a speck of what I believe is blood and the button is loosen,” you pinched and ripped it from the shirt and it’s faint loose thread.
“Fret not...” you smirked and pat his chest, “I will mend it should you ask.”
His hands came around and squeezed your forearms, his head moved back a little. He was perplexed...a light upturn in his lips revealed his sudden amusement.
He lifted a hand up and gently touched your face. He was breathing in a controlled state. You felt the intimacy of his closeness without fear of his wrath.
“No...” he drawled, “I was at Scotland yard. A poor deduction...” his thumb ran across your chin, “dear wife.”
You felt your heart pick up as his soft hand touched your face, you tried looking away from his staring eyes. Sherlock’s edged closer to your lips.
“Poor deduction but I am not stupid,” you consoled.
His lips broke into a wider smile revealing his teeth, he chuckled, “...I beg to differ.”
He moved abruptly back and fled to escape to his rooms. You knew his intention perfectly and chased after him, emphasising, “You had almost three hundred pounds in debt Sherlock. I at least know how to wisely spend my money.”
He spun on his heel and snapped at you, pointing harshly at your chest, “oh ho! Playing this game then are we? With your dowry gone, you have nothing left. I’d hardly call paying off my debts which were none of your concern, wise spending.”
You grabbed his finger and announced softer, serious and less aggressive, “Indeed, which is why I implore you to cease all further transactions in regards to your addictions.”
“Do not patronise me wife,” He scoffed and rolled his eyes tried tearing his hand away but your grip on his index finger tightened and the both of your grunted.
You grit your teeth at him, “Do not patronise me husband.”
He sighed and wiggled his finger from out of your hand.
He dusted his hands on his waist coat and huffed. He peered at you with a mischievous gaze.
“My debts...they included my friends...yes? From Mayfair?”
Oh that was cruel indeed. Mentioning those women when you were married to him. You wouldn’t dare let him threaten you over them.
You fought the urge to hit him and stomp your foot. You turned away from him and quickly composed yourself. Hastily you plucked some matches from the small box ontop of the fireplace mantel. You struck a small flame and tossed it into the fire place where you discarded some old newspapers as kindling.
“Yes,” you admitted tightly, “I know about your scandalous behaviours and forbid you from consorting in that demonstration again.”
He pushed passed you and unbuttoned his jacket and vest fully. He draped them over the back of one of the lounges, he pulled up his trousers slightly as he sat down.
He chuckled, “You forbid me?”
You glared at him and shot back up off the floor. You squeezed your eyes tightly as you firmly dictated, “I am the only woman to ever receive you carnally from now on.”
He smirked and spread his legs wide, folding his arms on his chest. He jerked his chin up at you and clicked his tongue, “I don’t believe you know what that means. Believe me little lamb, my fidelity is that last thing you’ll desire...or did you not learn from yesterday?”
You rolled your eyes and shook your head.
“I stand by what I mean Sherlock. You will not commit adultery while married to me,” you snapped. You wanted control, this would not be taken from you if you could help it.
“Or what?” He laughed, he then condescendingly moaned, “You’ll tell my big brother?”
As he went back to his smug chuckling you clenched your fists and stood over him. You weren’t thinking straight. Only a red shade cast in your eyes. You grabbed his collar and tugged him hard, spitting down at him with full anger as you threatened, “...Or I will kill you.”
He stopped laughing but didn’t stop his smug smiling. His hands came up and grabbed yours, prying them from his shirt.
“Barely been forty eight hours of wedded bliss and you desire to murder me. Ha! I now owe John five pounds,” he looked down at your chest which you realised was hanging in a uncompromising position. He could see right down your chest practically to your third rib with your lack of supporting chemise. Sherlock tongued the inside of his cheek and hummed, “My word.”
You gasped with horror and attempted to rip away from his hold, you grunted gruffly, “You are a pig Sherlock Holmes!”
He pulled you forcefully downwards and made your knees buckle. Your chest fell into his and you both hissed at the impact of crushing into each other.
Lewdly his hot wet tongue licked its way from your neck up to your earlobe while his hands pushed your thighs up to straddle over him, his fingers sharply stabbed into your backside under the night gown.
“You have absolutely no clue to what I am little Lamb.”
You tried pushing off him immediately, and felt his arm wrap around your waist and trap you against him.
Your legs so wildly spread and pressed against his trousers made you feel like you were riding on a horse.
Despite the plethora of farm animals you could compare in his and your name, you had both your wrists this caught in his one hand.
“Go on,” he chuckled as you struggled against him, “Tell me how you would do it...,” he taunted,
“How would you kill the great Sherlock Holmes, London’s finest Detective?”
You shrieked as you felt crushed under his baring arm, “I can think of many ways!”
“Well go on,” he smugly waited with raised brows, “Tell me.”
Your eyes rolled and you whined when he dug his nails into your wrists.
“I’ll push you down the stairs!”
He barked with laughter and shook his head, “You cannot be sure the fall would kill me, perhaps I might be paralysed, with many broken bones, but no no, I also don’t think you have the strength to push me around anywhere, look at you right now.”
“Fine!” you yelled, “Ill stab you with a knife!”
“Ah a violent approach, but what of the blood?” He grabbed your hip and moved you to grind your centre down on a lump in his trousers, “Why, even those idiots in Scotland Yard would figure out it was you; blood staining the clothes, carpet and blood beneath your nails, and where would you ever be able to hide the weapon?”
“Sherlock! Let me go or I’ll poison your tea!” you whined terribly.
He bit his lip and shook his head at you, “Oh dear Mrs Holmes, it’s possibly the most common death among an unhappy married couple. Wives are known to favour poison greatly.”
You heaved as you tried to catch your breath. You fell forward a little. Your sweaty forehead touched his.
“Please,” you whined, “let me go. All I want is you to be a civilised man and honour our marriage bed.”
He looked down at your parted lips. He looked back at your chest and shut his eyes.
“You want me to give up my whores Mrs Holmes?”
You gulped and nodded, “Of course.”
When he opened those blue orbs with the brown flecks, he whispered, “I promise to forsake them...if...”
“If?” you stammered and narrowed your eyes.
“Hush!” He reprimanded, “I promise to forsake my whores on Mayfair Row...If I can have my whore of Baker Street.”
Before you and time to reply and question what he even meant, he stood up and tossed you onto the floor. Sherlock crawled over you and pinned your flailing hands above your hand.
“You want to please me, please your husband, Mrs Holmes?” he gasped as his other hand went groping and squeezing around your soft body.
You weakly nodded, your head rested on the floor trying to get back the breath he knocked from you when he pushed you down.
You hissed softly, “Please, you’re hurting me.”
His hands loosened but held you trapped to the floor.
His lips danced over your cheek, “Then you will need to perform like a whore for me.”
A sobbing cry ripped front our chest, unsure of his real intention you quickly jumped to the conclusion of his implications.
You choked and shook your head, “No! I am not going to become a prostitute!”
He cackled at your fearful cry.
“No, this body belongs to me,” he said as he pinched the strings of your night gown and pushed the material away to show off your bare breasts.
His lips wrapped around your right nipples and sucked hard, tickling you with his tongue tip. Tears started to well in your face. You didn’t understand what he was implying to do to you. It tickled and felt so warm.
You were scared. You knew some men of the world were evil. Evil husband’s that pimped out the women they married. You couldn’t imagine being so intimate with another person. You couldn’t imagine succumbing to the agony you received the night before by Sherlock’s hand.
Kicking your feet across the rug and tried pushing your body from under him. He grunted as your nipple left his lips. He pressed the hand hard on your hip and affirmed, “Keep still, little lamb.”
“Sherlock,” you started to beg on a whimper, “Please, stop! You are frightening me, you’re h-hurting me!”
He looked down at you, his hair falling slightly on your head. His smile wavered as he took note of your tears and wobbling lips.
His gaze softened along with his voice, “...be completely honest with me.”
You nodded desperately, “I will, I will!”
“Did you look in the trunk at the foot of my bed?”
The chest full of explicit items and torture devices.
Your eyes squeezed tight and you exhaled, “I did.”
He smirked and let you go completely, standing up and held his hand to assist you too. When you were finally upright, he pinched your exposed nipple. You shrieked.
“I am a man Y/N, I have needs. I expect you to fulfil them earnestly if you desire I abandon my charity to Mayfair.”
You tried pushing his hand back and covering your breasts with the dressing gown. He smirked and shook his head at you, “No, no, let me see them.”
The silence was vile. The crackling of the fire place was the only ambience that showed attendance.
You couldn’t do it. It was wrong to be so exposed beyond the bedroom.
He waited and when you showed no sign of showing him, he sighed and nodded, “Very well, good night Mrs Holmes, I will call upon my friend Irene.”
He walked around you and journeyed to his open bedroom door.
As if all colour drained from your face you feverishly held out a hand and quickly called, “Wait, please! Look!”
You all but chased him into his own bedroom. He snapped his head in your direction. You stood in the centre space between his bed and the door.
He raised a brow and watched almost unimpressed as your trembling fingers shed your dressing gown and pulled the neckline of your night gown open...there he could finally observe your luscious breasts.
“Why Mrs Holmes,” he mused, sitting on his bed and peeling his cravat off his neck, “Your teats are exposed, careful,” he sarcastically warned, “One might mistake you for a slut.” You felt breathless and curled your lips inside.
You couldn’t believe it, you were letting him hurt you in a new way. You were letting him bully you. It wasn’t right and you desperately hated it, but what else was there except to let him defile and destroy your holy vows?
“Is that a sanitary apron on your waist?” he question, pointing at the lump under your gown.
You nodded, “I am still bleeding husband...”
“Do you know what that means?” Sherlock said unbuttoning his shirt.
Your licked your lips, folding your arms behind your back you tried hard to not cover yourself,
“My body is extinguishing my mental illnesses.”
He smirked and rolled his eyes, “Your medical knowledge is dated, but that is not what I implied...I meant that you should come to your knees and perform fellatio.”
Your eyes widened...fellatio was such a naughty word to hear let alone say. It was the type of practise in the book in his chest. Oral sex. Seeing the woman hold her male companions member appeared lewd and distasteful.
You hadn’t thought of ever doing it yourself, it served no purpose in procreation with god.
Flustered and shy, you cupped your hands over your face to think.
Sherlock’s voice was softer this time. He wasn’t mocking you as he explained, “I will not force you to do this Y/N, you do not have to if you do not want to.”
You shook your head and scowled at him from your hands, “But I do! I don’t want you to ever lay with a woman other than me! I am-“ you choked on some on coming tears, “I am your wife Sherlock, please...promise me if I do this you won’t lay with another woman.”
He unbuckled his trousers and sighed, “Then get on your knees,” he pulled out his semi hard rod, “and kiss your husbands cock.”
You looked over your shoulder at his door and then back at him.
Would you do this? Humiliate yourself in promise of keeping his vows loyally to you?
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the gilded age costuming is interesting in that they deliberately take inspiration from later designs for bertha and gladys to emphasise the “nouveau riche” while the old money characters will be clothed in more historically accurate fashions (some are even direct replicas of paintings/extant garments)
I do understand the urge to do that, and I know it's approach with a lot of historical costuming, but personally I dislike that approach. I think it misunderstands the point of fashion in Victorian society. Today we think of the most fashionable people to be very forward thinking in their fashion and for formal clothing to be most fashionable. Red carpet is often treated as fashion event. However, this was not the case in Victorian society. Fashion was social decorum, it was a requirement to participate in high society. Or rather it was requirement to participate in society at all. Even workers adhered to the fashionable silhouette, while working. Here's for example factory workers from mid 1890s with perfectly fashionable silhouettes with the big sleeves and all.
I think it's quite backwards to think nouveau rich would be experimenting with futuristic fashion. It's unthinkable they wouldn't adhere to the fashionable silhouette for high society events especially. They were the ones trying to establish themselves as part of high society, so they would be the ones most religiously following the fashionable silhouettes and styles. This is why tea gowns were much more experimental, and why the counter cultural Aesthetic style, which rejected the Victorian silhouette, could first entered high society through tea gowns. Tea gowns were worn in more intimate society gatherings (afternoon tea with neighbors and friends), so there was more room to experiment with new counter cultural styles. Tea gowns in 1880s had many of the elements that would become fashionable in 1890s, looser fit in bodice, natural form bustle and even balloon sleeves. Some British middle class/upper middle class women would dress in Aesthetic dress during 1880s in public society events, but they were not part of the upper echelon of high societies and no one dressed that way in high society evening events. The old money rich people also had more room to experiment with more unconventional fashion than nouveau rich, since their position in the exclusive high society was so much more secure, even if they were not as respectable (and adhering to the fashion ideals was about respectability) as expected of high society, their connections and status protected them from consequences. Money was not enough to secure your status, you needed connections.
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I was watching 1899 and I thought one of the dresses looked familiar.
Left: actress Rosalie Craig as Virginia Wilson in 1899
Right: Tea gown, Maison Worth, 1890s, Musée Galliera de la Mode de la Ville de Paris
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Ivory China Silk Tea Gown, Paris, 1890s
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TEA-GOWN BELONGING TO THE ACTRESS RÉJANE (1898)
For receiving close friends, especially in the morning, women usually wore a peignoir or a déshabillé – a dressing gown or a negligee. In the 1890s and especially after 1900 a new custom was adopted, and the lady of the house would entertain at tea time – in the late afternoon – wearing an indoor robe known (in French) as a 'tea-gown'. This light garment was intended both for receiving company and for personal wear. In informal situations, then, it was less 'dressy' than dinner or ball gowns, as its modest neckline – here actually taking the form of a high collar – indicates. Above all, though, it was comfortable and less 'starchy', and could either fall straight, as here, or be slightly belted at the waist. Often made from light-coloured fabric and lace, the tea-gown expressed the wearer's touch of whimsy. This one belonged to the famous – and famously elegant – actress Réjane (1856-1920), a loyal client of Jacques Doucet.
#acting#actor#actress#fashion#historical#the gilded age#historical fashion#historical clothing#historical dress#history#victorian era#victorian#victorian fashion#victorian history#fashion dress#1890s#long dress#victorian dress
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This dress was worn by the donor's grandmother, Mrs Louisa Burrows, in the late 1800s.
Characteristic of women's fashion of this period was the tight-fitting boned bodice, aimed at creating the much desired hourglass shape. However some women rebelled against this tight, constricting style. Inspired by the Aesthetic movement in England, which encouraged good design, originality and self-expression, they began to wear easy-fitting dresses which revived past styles (Walkley 1985).
This dress borrows elements from Medieval 18th and 19th century fashion, with its loose front and girdle, and hanging sleeves. Such characteristics have been combined with elements of late 19th century fashion, including the bustle, bows and lace, however remains distinctly different to mainstream costumes of the period. The influence of Aesthetic dress is also evident in the dress's embellishment, which features a repetitive floral motif embroidered along the opening and shoulders of the gown. However the dresses bustle at the back may be seen as contradicting 'Aesthetic philosophy', and may suggest that the costume is a fashionable form of Aesthetic dress.
The Aesthetic style was embraced by a relatively small section of the community, and often extended beyond fashion to include visual arts, literature and fashionable living that rejected the contemporary dress and norms of Victorian industrial society and design, and focussed on the idea of beauty and all things 'artistic'. It was popular amongst artists, poets, writers and actors, most famously Oscar Wilde and William Morris. Although experiencing a surge in popularity in the 1870s, Aesthetic dress was nonetheless considered outside of the normal conventions of the time; its unstructured style, particularly for women, thought to be immodest and unfeminine. Aesthetics were commonly the subject of ridicule in cartoons and magazines such as the British satire magazine 'Punch', not only for their 'alternative' clothing, but for their perceived sentimentality, exhibitionism and exaggerated language.
Related to Aesthetic dress was the Rational Dress, or Dress Reform movement, that began in England in around the 1850s and continued throughout the 19th century. However unlike Aesthetic dress, which rebelled against the fashion norms of the period, this movement actively promoted a reformed dress style that combined comfort, health, convenience and beauty. In 1881 the Rational Dress Society was founded in London, and began publishing a Gazette that outlined the following philosophy: 'The Rational Dress Society protests against the introduction of any fashion in dress that either deforms the figure, impedes the movement of the body, or in any way tends to injure the health. It protests against the wearing of tightly-fitting corsets, of high-heeled or narrow-toed boots and shoes; of heavily-weighted skirts, as rendering healthy exercise almost impossible; and of all tie-down cloaks or other garments impeding the movements of the arms. It protests against crinolines or crinolettes of any kind as ugly and deforming reforms' (RDA 1978).
While initially Aesthetic dress was worn in limited artistic and dress reform circles, in the 1890s the style had been adapted for fashion and worn informally in the home as tea gowns and 'at home' dresses. As such it is difficult to ascertain whether the wearer, Mrs Louisa Burrows, was a firm follower of the Aesthetic movement. Also in the Museum's collection is a boned bodice worn by Mrs Burrows in around 1900. Nonetheless, this well-provenanced dress gives insight into the influence of Aesthetic dress on Australian fashion during the late 19th century.
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