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                  Kimberly Alexander 
                  Upcoming Talks for Fall 2019:

                  Treasures Afoot: Shoe Stories from the Georgian Era 
                  and
                  Fashioning the New England Family
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                  September 9, 7:00pm
                  Wiggin Memorial Library and Stratham Historical Society, Stratham, NH
                  Fashioning the 18th Century New England Family


                  September 28, 2:00pm
                  Massachusetts Historical Society 
                  Workshop/Free but registration required
                  Primary Sources for Fashion & Costume History Research
                  With Kimberly Alexander, University of New Hampshire and Sara Georgini, MHS
                  Antique textiles, images of historical figures, and material culture hold a wealth of information that can enrich personal stories, explain relationships, and contextualize the world that people occupied. However, these sources can seem daunting to explore. Two experts on fashion and material culture will guide you through unraveling the stories woven into history’s fabric. This workshop is part of MHS Remember Abigail programming, and Boston Fashion Week


                  October 1, 6:30pm
                  Malden Historical Society, Malden, MA
                  Shoes and Their Stories[part of the Elisha Converse  2020 Exploring the Industrial History of Malden series]

                  October 16, 7:00pm
                  Pilgrim Hall Museum, Plymouth, MA
                  “1 gowne 6 petticoats 1 pair body’s’: Dressing in Early New England


                  October 25-27
                  The Honourable Cordwainers' Company35th Annual General Meeting with The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, Williamsburg, VA
                  ‘Shoes for the Southern Trade’: Northern Complicity & the Shoe Trade in the Early Republic


                  November 3, 1:00pm
                  Durham Historic Association
                  Buying Shoes and Purchasing Patriotism: 蜜蜂加速器解锁永久vipPoliticization of Footwear, 1760s-1770s








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                  A Child’s 18th Century Lace Stomacher


                  详解国内流行网游加速器原理、技术与实现-宅玩网:2021-6-15 · 1. 前言 网游加速器是针对个人用户快速连接网游服务器的一种服务。为了解决国内南北网络互联瓶颈的问题,“网络加速器”厂商通过搭建多个高带宽的双线机房(或通过租用双线VPS主机),并在这些机房的两大线路中架设多个节点服务器,然后为其编写“网络加速器客户端”,通过客户端判断用户 ...th century women’s dress, serving both to cover stays, and to embellish open robes or gowns. They were easily removable via quick stitching or straight pins.

                  This charming piece may have been owned by Hannah Standish between 1703-1774, although the maker and wearer are not known.

                  Many thanks to PHM Director, Donna Curtin, for her assistance.


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                  I am so taken with this elegant portrait of a fashionable sitter, c. 1830. I have a fragment only-- one section of the repeat. The original textile from the Cooper Hewitt (collection.cooperhewitt.org), shows two women set within decorative medallions. 
                  Seen from waist up, these portrait busts are carried out in purple and white cotton, with the engraving done on a plain weave. There is an emphasis on their delicate features, and the latest on-trend dresses, with their voluminous sleeves, and hairstyles for 1830. It would not be surprising if they were based on actual portraits or taken from contemporary fashion plates. I am hopeful a reader may be able to identify the source.
                  What is especially interesting about the fragment in my study collection, is that, unlike the extant example at the Cooper Hewitt, its was repurposed for a light weight quilt or coverlet as some slightly later time. Although somewhat faded likely due to exposure to light, the piece provides an opportunity to see the hand- quilting up close, and to peek at the cotton batting which is falling away. Underneath is left a ghost of the original portrait, gazing out from her cotton enclosure.


                  极光vpm破解无限版 For an example of the original textile, see: http://collection.cooperhewitt.org/objects/18668091/

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                  Brocaded Silk Shoes: James Adams, London Shoemaker, 1770s


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                  I viewed these elegant court pumps from the collection of the Pilgrim Hall Museum, in Plymouth, MA. (www.pilgrimhall.org) on my summer research road trip in 2018. They are stunners. 
                  Vibrant, with high quality finish work, these c.1770s brocaded silk buckle shoes exhibit a high Italian heel, oval toe and pattern matched heels & toes. There is evidence of multiple buckle piercings on straps/lachets; they may have been wedding shoes. Note the snippet of the brocade placed on the underside of the upper portion of the tongue - a special visual 'pop' for the wearer.

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                  One shoe features a paper label, identifying the shoemaker as James Adams at the ‘shoe warehouse,’ 224 High Street, Borough, London. Adams is mentioned in Wakefield’s Merchant and Tradesman’s General Directory for London from 1793. 
                  The accession number is 1373.3a,b

                  Thank you to curator Rebecca Griffin, and the staff of the Pilgrim Hall Museum for their kindly assistance.

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                  Leverett Family Petticoat Returns to Colonial Williamsburg

                  The Leverett family quilted petticoat, reproduced from a pattern created by pricking the design onto muslin, has been returned to the makers at the Margaret Hunter Shop, Milliners and Mantuamakers at Colonial Williamsburg. 
                  The pricking was in the collection of Massachusetts Historical Society, along with a written description (left by a family member) which noted it was a pale blue silk with silk thread used for the quilting, which gave it the impression of light ‘tissue.’ The recreation of the petticoat was a collaborative project between the Massachusetts Historical Society and Colonial Williamsburg, and was created for display in the exhibit entitled Fashioning the New England Family, on view from October 2018-April 2019. 
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                  Fashioning the New England Family, www.masshist.org
                  Mannequins by Astrida Schaeffer
                  It is now safely in the hands of Mistress Whitacre, where it will be used for educational and interpretive purposes. It was entirely hand sewn by the milliners and mantua-makers.
                  For information on the project, see: 

                  For information on the exhibition, see:

                  For an interview with Jared Bowen of Open Studio on WGBH:

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                  The Latest in Mourning Wear: Advice from Harper’s Bazar, 1901


                  “Crepe is more fashionable than ever” notes the November 1901 edition of Harper’s Bazar. “House gowns and dinner gowns made entirely of crepe and in the princesse style are exceedingly becoming, while there is permitted on crepe dinner gowns a trimming of the dull jet passementerie.”

                  安卓永久免费网络加速器Making reference to the fact that “all of England is in mourning” –Queen Victoria died on the 22ndof January, 1901 -- the author observed that it is no wonder that there was a plethora of choices of style and textiles available on the market. The writer also notes that after the first expenditure of the dress and appropriate accessories, it is possible to get along with “fewer gowns than when wearing colors.”

                  I recently found this volume of Harper's
                  in fine condition at the Avenue Victor Hugo Books in Lee, NH (May 2019).