5 amazing historic dresses

Many of these dresses are always kept in museums to preserve works of art.


Much has been written over the years on cinema costumes and how, in some cases, costume designers really try to recreate historic dresses, yet in most cases, no matter how beauty and mounting the dress From the period, once you've dug more deeply realize that it was actually not historically accurate. So, instead of talking about cinema dresses, we thought today that we would tell you many incredible historic dresses that have actually been made for very rich and worn by them on special occasions. Many of these dresses are always kept in museums to preserve works of art.

1. The peacock dress

This dress was made for Mary Curzon which was the baroness of Kedleston to bring to the celebration of the Coronation of King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra. It was designed by Jean-Philippe who is personally worth for Baroness Curzon. The dress was made from chiffon fabric which was then decorated with gold and silver thread, and when we say Doorons, we mean that metal, not just a golden thread. He was then sent to Paris, in France where he was wearing a two-piece dress composed of a bodice and a skirt. A long train that ended in silk chiffon roses has also been added to Paris, then the dress was returned to India. The overall effect was amazing. The golden and silver threads were sewn in his hand in a pattern resembling peacock feathers and these "green" eyes that look like precious stones are actually made of beetles of beetles. This dress is now kept in a museum in a glass case to help monitor temperature and humidity around it to prevent it from being ruined. Since the wire metal in the dress makes it not only heavy (it is 4.5 kg) but also very sensitive to damage.

2. SISI DRESS

This beautiful dress was made for the Empress Elisabeth of Austria, WHO nickname was Sisi. It was done by Charles Frederick. If you look closely, you will notice that it seems incredibly similar, we even went as far as it is almost identical to that carried by Emmy Rossum in the ghost of the opera. This dress can be seen in a museum in Vienna. They had a whole exhibition on the Corfu Couture Sisi, called this because she owned a palace in Corfu, a Greek island and she liked dressing in quite spectacular dresses.

3. Marie Antoinette Shirt

Marie Antoinette was such a fashionista that everything she tried in fashion had the power to do or break a fashionable trend and influence the fashion industry not only in France but in all Europe . Many of his beautiful beautiful and complex dresses with skirts as wide as they have been immortalized in paintings, but it's his simple cotton dress that has become known as "queen shirt" that causes The most tricks, because not only does this look similar to that of the underwear of the time, but it has also been made of cotton, a very long chain of events caused an arrow of slavery to produce More cotton to support new fashionable cotton dresses.

4. Coronation dress Maria Alexandrovna

Maria Alexandrovna A.K.A. As Maria of Hase was the wife of the Russian Emperor Alexander II. This dress was made in St. Petersburg specifically for coronation. Maria was 32 years old at the time of the event and has already been married to Alexander II for 16 years already. The dress was made to look like fashionable fashion at the time of European dresses with Russian elements to keep it on the point of occasion. It is decorated with silver embroidery and has been kept in the Kremlin for years as a work of art. But not only is it impressive enough to be kept in a museum, but it also inspired curtains at the Mariinsky Theater in St.Petersburg, which was named after the Empress itself.

5. Coronation Dress of Queen Elizabeth II

Queen Elizabeth The 2nd is a very elegant woman, you can always see it so far when she wears her color coordinates for all special occasions and ceremonies she attends. But his coronation dress is definitely one of the most impressive dresses she has never worn. It was designed by Norman Hartnell and it took 8 months of hard work to create. Many thoughts and efforts have entered. The queen wanted her dress to be made of satin, like her wedding dress. It also includes embroidery elements that mean all the countries of the United Kingdom and Commonwealth countries. So, it has the English rose, an Irish shamrock, the Scottish thistle, the Welsh leek, a maple leaf for Canada, a Hower for Australia, etc. The Queen should actually wear it several times after the coronation, for the opening of parliaments in Australia, New Zealand, Canada and Ceylon.


Categories: Fashion
Tags: history / queen
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