#childrens fashion

LIVE
history-of-fashion:1870-1886 Auguste Hadamard - The Visit(Private collection)

history-of-fashion:

1870-1886 Auguste Hadamard - The Visit

(Private collection)


Post link
“Arlene Airess loves the crisp, clean lines of little sailor dresses for sisters." Ad for

“Arlene Airess loves the crisp, clean lines of little sailor dresses for sisters." 

Ad for Fortrel. 

McCall’s. August 1965.


Post link
Three Stars by Cinderella. Detail of an ad by Mission Valley Fabrics. McCall’s Magazine. Augus

Three Stars by Cinderella. Detail of an ad by Mission Valley Fabrics. 

McCall’s Magazine. August 1955.


Post link
yusuke-plus-13:children ware the costume of the Heian period and paraded around the shinsenen.#shi

yusuke-plus-13:

children ware the costume of the Heian period and paraded around the shinsenen.
#shinenen #parade #kyoto #japan #heian


Post link
marthajefferson:history meme : 05/?? moments | the Night of September 3rd, 1951The night in questionmarthajefferson:history meme : 05/?? moments | the Night of September 3rd, 1951The night in questionmarthajefferson:history meme : 05/?? moments | the Night of September 3rd, 1951The night in questionmarthajefferson:history meme : 05/?? moments | the Night of September 3rd, 1951The night in questionmarthajefferson:history meme : 05/?? moments | the Night of September 3rd, 1951The night in questionmarthajefferson:history meme : 05/?? moments | the Night of September 3rd, 1951The night in questionmarthajefferson:history meme : 05/?? moments | the Night of September 3rd, 1951The night in questionmarthajefferson:history meme : 05/?? moments | the Night of September 3rd, 1951The night in questionmarthajefferson:history meme : 05/?? moments | the Night of September 3rd, 1951The night in questionmarthajefferson:history meme : 05/?? moments | the Night of September 3rd, 1951The night in question

marthajefferson:

history meme : 05/?? moments | the Night of September 3rd, 1951

The night in question has gone down in history as Tʜᴇ Bᴀʟʟ ᴏғ ᴛʜᴇ Cᴇɴᴛᴜʀʏ, an orgy of luxury and excess - and those who were there were so consumed by the opulence and theatricality that they had no reason to care.
Taking place in his Venetian Palace on the Grand Canal, the host, Count Carlos de Beistegui, was apparently too eccentric to have many friends, but that hardly stopped the upper crust from gossiping about the upcoming Italian fête for months leading up to it.
“At the time, Beistegui’s fête seemed like a moral indecency,” David Herbert, the British socialite would later write.
Perhaps Cocteau put it most neatly when he said of the half a billion francs Beistegui was spending: “It costed about as much as a warplane, and I prefer a ball.”
Venice never had and never would again see anything like it. Over the coming days the city would witness the sort of grandiosity, imperious behaviour and outrageous displays of opulence not seen since the days of the doges. A thousand guests attended, including Salvador Dali, Christian Dior, Gene Tierney or Orson Wells, and many that weren’t invited arrived by yacht, desperately anchoring at the Venice Lido in the hopes of an invitation or a way in.
Everyone dressed as “retro aristocrats”, and arrived via gondola, in an almost surreal atmospher, reminiscent of the Venetian life immediately before the fall of the republic at the end of the 18th century. Every window in the palace was lit the same way it would have been in the 18th century, and not by electricity. Even the private detective who screened each guest on arrival was in period clothes. Anyone who did not adhere to the dress code was quickly whisked out of sight, though most people had invested months and huge sums in their costumes.
A night that will live long in the memory of each of the guest…


Post link
Advertisement for socks by EJ Gitano (1990).

Advertisement for socks by EJ Gitano (1990).


Post link
loading