The exaggeration was also present in women's fashion including black dresses. They would wear the finest fabrics, nearly transparent. Despite the fear of revolution that existed in other European countries, French fashion managed to win and hold. Silk, lace and brocade dress male and disappeared for a time, also female.
The nineteenth century
During the nineteenth century black dresses varied modes of production. In the first half appeared in the mechanization of printing processes and also produced a series of improvements in spinning and weaving machines. In 1851 Isaac Merritt Singer sewing machines modernized, and in 1856 William Henry Perkin was aniline, the first synthetic dye. Besides this century witnessed the birth of the garment as understood today, a large scale, and high fashion, created by Charles Frederick Worth in 1856, when he opened his maison in Paris, which had their seasonal collections.
In the early nineteenth century during the Napoleonic Empire, there was a return to formalism and reloaded it, but fashion does not change much. The female black dresses had a waist too high, and tried to imitate the forms of ancient Greece and Rome. It was simple dresses made of cotton, muslin, gauze or muslin, they did not need braces or farthingale, which were accompanied by shawls or boleros, many cashmere, the imported tissue type that was a fierce competition for silks Lyon. The restoration of the French monarchy in 1814 produced a reaction in women's fashion that brought back corsets, crinolines and armor, from the 1820 lowered the size of the waist and leg sleeves emerged (recessed from the shoulder to the elbow and very narrow at the wrist).
At this time, women's black dresses and fashion was dictated by France, while in England they decided masculine bias, England also had a top textile machinery, advanced and wool industry's finest tailors. In any case, it would mark the bourgeoisie that these trends.
The second half of the century
In the 1850s came the big stores, where products were sold at lower prices, but also fashion magazines began to play an important role in the development of clothing, and finally, the development of transport, with the consequent growth exports, achieved a democratization of dress.
The clearest change was the introduction of individual semicircular mantle on the right shoulder and later the Persian caftan and Assyrian black dresses with long sleeves.
Byzantium
In the Byzantine Empire in the sixth century the most notable change over the Roman dress was the introduction of black dresses embroidery, tassels, fringes and ornaments in oriental style.
Monday, August 26, 2013
Impressive And Surprising Discoveries About Black Dresses Fashion
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