What is a Doll?

How long have we had this love affair with Dolls?

Pearls of Wisdom:

New World Dictionary describes a doll as - "a child's toy, puppet, marionette, etc. made to resemble a human being."


Showing posts with label Hair fashion ca1800's. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hair fashion ca1800's. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Walking Down the Red Carpet 19th century style

The French Revolution at the end of the 18th century had a great deal to do with bringing hair fashion back down to Earth. Europeans and European-influenced countries saw the final triumph of undress or informal styles over the brocades, lace, periwig, and powder of the earlier eighteenth century. There was a return to the classical Greek hairstyles, with hair dressed closer to the head and fillets or bands of ribbon worn by women. No one in Europe wanted to appear to be an aristocrat, while in Britain, Beau Brummell introduced trousers, perfect tailoring, and unadorned, immaculate linen as the ideals of men's fashion.Women's fashions followed classical ideals, and tightly laced corsets were temporarily abandoned in favor of a high-waisted, natural figure.
Boilly "Checkers" ca. 1803
Queen Victoria Hairstyles

The model on the left has a typical 1840's hairstyle with a coiled, braided bun in back



"Mr and Mrs Charles Henry Carter" Attributed to Nicholas Biddle Kittle, ca. 1840. Here is domestic bliss, the husband quiet and studious, his wife gentle and devoted. Parlor has the intensity of a dollhouse. Nothing is done in this house without deliberation; when there is a child, its doll will be chosen with the same care. (Museum City of New York)... John Noble



Kister "Civil War" ca. 1860





Kister China Doll, "Civil War" ca. 1860



From the late 1830s to the mid 1860s women commonly wore their hair parted in the center, looped or draped in front of the ears and neatly bunned into a low chignon at the nape. This style was modest and neat, emphasising the width rather than height of the face, and was often worn with a lace cap. Queen Victoria and Melanie Wilkes (in the 1939 Gone With the Wind film adaptation) both wore this iconically demure hairstyle.
A variation on the theme was to add a real or false braid across the top of the head, just visible in front of the cap or hat brim.





Brown Eyed Kestner "Covered Wagon" hair-style ca. 1860









"The Heiress" Olivia de Havilland and Montgomery Clift ca. 1949



"Too Early" Tissot

In the 1870s women wore ringlets at a ball. The hair was curled and arranged at the crown, with longer ringlets falling down the nape of the neck; often false curls would be added to the updo to increase its bulk. The front hair could be pulled straight back, parted in the center or worn as short curled bangs.


"Grape Lady" Alt, Beck & Gottschalck ca. 1865


Combs and other hair adornments were all the rage in the mid-1800’s. Women loved to decorate their hair with brooches, tiaras and all things sparkly. Interestingly, most of the hair ornaments from this era had detachable fixtures so that they could double as a brooch or pendant.


Conta & Boehme shoulder heads showing elaborate styles and hair ornament similar to plate below ca. 1860's




"Les Modes Parisiennes" December 1865




Conta & Boehme exquisite lace and brocade detail on back of dress



Conta & Boehme doll with hairnet holding hair in back of head ,and a golden luster tiara in the front



First Century Roman Woman statue shows ringlet's popularity even thousands of years ago.


Ringlets are closely associated with many eras, the large long neck draping ringlet of Marie Antoinette's 18th Century France. The petite forehead and before-the-ear ringlets of the Federal (USA), or Regency (England) eras of early 19th Century. The ponytail full of ringlets of the Victorian era (mid 19th Century), and so on to this very day, although ringlets now usually reserved for special occasion hairstyles.





“Pride and Prejudice” Curls
Although Jane Austen’s novel was set very late in the 1700s, the hairstyles from the BBC adaptation are appropriate for the early 19th century as well. A variation on the Queen Victoria look, this style emphasises the width of the face. The hair is center-parted and worn in bunches of ringlets at the temples, while the back hair is worn in some kind of chignon at the crown of the head.






Alt, Beck and Gottschalck china shoulder head doll. The facial features include blue painted eyes, partially outlined in black, exposed ears and well blushed cheeks. The doll has two large molded curls on the forehead.


1938 Bette Davis film Jezebel



Portrait of the Comtesse Vilain XIII and her Daughter by Jacques -Louis Davis 1816 National Gallery, London




F.&W. Goebel half-doll with finely modelled and painted flowers on the hair. Three long vertical curls are molded on each side of the head. ca. 1900's


July Fashions for 1842



Kate Winslet as Maryanne Dashwood "Sense and Sensibility" 1995


In the Mirror of Graces, a Lady of Distinction writes….Now, easy tresses, the shining braid, the flowing ringlet confined by the antique comb, or bodkin, give graceful specimens of the simple taste of modern beauty. Nothing can correspond more elegantly with the untrammeled drapery of our newly-adopted classic raiment than this undecorated coiffure of nature.




"Lady in Lemon Dress"


During this period, the classical influence extended to hairstyles. Often masses of curls were worn over the forehead and ears, with the longer back hair drawn up into loose buns or Psyche knots influenced by Greek and Roman styles. By the later 1810s, front hair was parted in the center and worn in tight ringlets over the ears.




"Spill Curls" ca. 1875


Ringlets have been popular for thousands of years, since some woman first realized that by gently heating a rod with a candle's flame and wrapping hair around it, she might not burn her hair off, and she just might get a gentle feminine curly ringlet. Then, of course, she realized that she'd need a maid or two to maneuver around her entire head and keep a series of rods warming and at-the-ready to create a head full of ringlets.



"Morning Glory" elaborate hairstyle




KPM Berlin "Morning Glory" ca. 1850 extremely rare doll, with painted eyes
and modelled eyelids

Dressel and Kister "Beehive" style, late 1800's



Women's styles concentrated on variations of a topknot with hair framing the face at the temples. At the beginning of the century, women abandoned their huge powdered wigs to twist their hair into Apollo knots and adorn their heads with Greek inspired wreaths, jeweled ornaments, flowers, and strands of pearls. As the century progressed, women's hair continued to be worn swept on top of the head, but the styles became more ornate. Their hair was greased, braided, and twisted into elaborate knots with curled or frizzed hair at the sides. Women's hairstyles had become so elaborate by the end of the century that wigs were back in demand. These elaborate styles provided many poor women with needed money, as they cut their hair and sold it to wigmakers.


Millinery shop in Paris, Chalon ca. 1822


Kate Greenaway "Bubbles"


"Curly Top China" wearing lace bonnet ca.1860's


19th-century headwear on display at Old Sturbridge Village



"Going to School"

Rolinda Sharples self portrait ca. 1820

Caps, mob caps, and veils were made of lace, white linen or delicate muslin, and trimmed with ribbon. They could be ruffled, embroidered, or plain, depending on who wore them and their status.
Artist Rolinda Sharples wears her hair in a mass of curls; her mother wears a sheer indoor cap,



Conservative married women continued to wear linen mob caps, which now had wider brims at the sides to cover the ears. Fashionable women wore similar caps for morning (at home undress) wear. No respectable woman would leave the house without a hat or. As for bonnets, their crowns and brims were adorned with increasingly elaborate ornamentations, such as feathers and ribbons. In fact, ladies of the day embellished their hats frequently, replacing old decorations with new trims or feathers.



The most widely used hair preparations of the century were Macassar oil and brilliantine, whose functions were to give hair shine. In general, hair fashions changed faster as news traveled faster from one country, and even continent, to another. The simplicity of the smooth, center-parted styles worn by women in the Victorian era lasted until the 1870s, when the Parisian hairdresser Marcel Grateau created a new, natural-looking wave by turning a curling iron upside down. The Marcel wave remained popular for almost half a century and helped usher in a new era of women's waved and curled hairpieces, which were mixed with the natural hair. Another major innovation at the end of the 19th century was the invention in 1895 of the safety razor by an American, William Gillette. Barbers now concentrated on cutting hair and trimming beards and mustaches, and a new age of at-home grooming practices began.