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  2. Fashion plate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fashion_plate

    Fashion plates should not be confused with costume plates. As outlined by the French social and cultural historian Daniel Roche, there was a point when depictions of costume and of fashion "diverged": [16] the latter came to depict clothes of the present day, while the former came to represent clothes "after the event", that is, after the epoch of the fashionable style.

  3. Barbara Johnson (fashion) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbara_Johnson_(fashion)

    Barbara was born in 1738 in Olney, Buckinghamshire, the eldest of four children of Woolsey Johnson and his wife Jane, née Russell, and baptised in London. Her father was a vicar who opposed dissent in his parish and her mother a writer whose pedagogical materials and letters have proved useful for historians of epistolary literacy and informal education.

  4. Galerie des Modes et Costumes Français - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galerie_des_Modes_et...

    Despite the prominence of eighteenth-century French style, the first true fashion plates were produced for The Lady's Magazine, a British publication established in 1770. Prior to this date, the majority of prints published in France, such as Jean Dieu de Saint-Jean's engravings of male and female costume at the Court of Louis XIV, were ...

  5. Irene Lewisohn Costume Reference Library - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irene_Lewisohn_Costume...

    It is known as one of the world's foremost fashion libraries. [2] The collection contains over thirty thousand books, nearly seven hundred periodical titles, and over fifteen hundred designer files. [3] The documents pertain to worldwide fashion and clothing history from the sixteenth century to today. [3]

  6. Cabinet des Modes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cabinet_des_Modes

    The magazine was preceded by the hugely expensive and exclusive Galerie des Modes et Costumes Français, which was published rarely and consisted of a series of decorative fashion plates, expanding on the fashion aspect idea of the almanach pocket books, which was popular during the 18th-century and normally contained one fashion plate each.

  7. 1795–1820 in Western fashion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1795–1820_in_Western_fashion

    Fashion Plate (The Russian & Prussian Bonnet & Pelisse), published in La Belle Assemblée, July 1, 1814. In the late 18th century, clothes were mostly sold by individual shopkeepers who were often the artisans who made the goods.

  8. 1775–1795 in Western fashion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1775–1795_in_Western_fashion

    Glossary of 18th Century Costume Terminology; An Analysis of An Eighteenth Century Woman's Quilted Waistcoat by Sharon Ann Burnston Archived 2010-05-22 at the Wayback Machine; French Fashions 1700 - 1789 from The Eighteenth Century: Its Institutions, Customs, and Costumes, Paul Lecroix, 1876 "Introduction to 18th Century Men and Women's Fashion".

  9. Marchande de modes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marchande_de_modes

    A fashion merchant was a businessperson specialising in the production and the sale of fashion accessories, especially adornments for hairstyles and gowns. The profession emerged in the early eighteenth century and reached its height at the end of the same century.

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