Showing posts with label Downton Abbey fashion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Downton Abbey fashion. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

EVEN MORE ON THE DOWNTON ABBEY PHENOMENON

From now on you'll find me randomly posting something or rather about this Masterpiece Classic. Every Sunday after Downton Abbey airs on PBS my Pinterest Board of the same name goes absolutely, stark-raving bonkers!  On it, pinners finding anything worn by Lady Mary repin at breakneck speed and I'm left to wonder how phenomenons like this happen.  I mean really, we can't seem to get enough fashion and social history out of this episodic soap.  Week before last, Lady Sybil died of child birth.  Next day on one of the DA pages there were several videos on eclampsia the condition that took her. Are we living vicariously through these lords and ladies?  Wanting or missing some kind of grand magnificence in our lives?
Maybe one of the reasons we love DA so much is that: It's epic.  And it seems every country has had one great epic in literature.  Russia had War and Peace, America, Gone With the Wind and South America--House of Spirits.    So why did it take good, old and established  England almost 1000 plus years to grind out a really magnificent drama like Downton Abbey to add to this epic stew?  Something very, very English, unabashedly playing out the dramas--warts and all-- of it's class system.  Of war and change.  Well, that is a question. I know it is a loaded one but I really want to hear more about from you fellow DA Addicts out
there . . . .
 Header Photo: Downton Abbey darlings in Alberta Ferretti (standing) and Julien MacDonald for the January 2012 Issue of Vogue.
Second Photo: The Crawley Sisters for the January 2012 Issue of Vogue UK
Photos 3 and 4: The Crawley Sisters wearing  their 1912 costumes designed by Caroline McCall via /Lady Mary in 1912--One of my very fave Downton Abbey designs by Caroline McCall and I can totally see this as a wedding dress in white or just as it is . . . .via
Photo 5: Lady Sybil in what is a great rendition of Paul Poiret's--daring for their time--haram pants. This whole ensemble is in a word, brilliant! Via

Thursday, January 17, 2013

THE ABBEY FACTOR


 Anyone out there following this blog for any length of time knows I'm totally wrapped up in vintage fashion. Yes, Sunday nights my cream puff deserts have been replaced with sixty minutes of the kind of eye candy found in these images.   Spot on and spectacular is how I've previously described the costuming in Downton Abbey, the breakout British series laden with some of the most delectable mixes of fabric and laces you'll see anywhere.  Now that we're into Season 3, the Ladies Mary and Edith show up in different episodes in wedding gowns so similar, frankly I was disappointed. Not disappointed because of the designs--they were marvelous and Downton's designer, Caroline McCall did a stunning job on both-- but I felt when Edith walked down the stairway a couple nights back I was looking at Mary's wedding dress all over again.  Here though is where Edith's ensemble varied: Once she returns home from getting jilted at the altar, she runs up the staircase ditching the silk gauze veil, frantically throwing it off her head. Then it actually floats to the floor like a dropping parachute in the wind.  This where I love costume design.  McCall used that silk gauze  to create a mood, a feeling, some drama

For brides out there wanting to create some Downtown Abbey drama here are a few of my own tips for getting it right.

* The early twenties era started out proper and ladylike and by mid-twenties went 'jazz age' with flapper style skirts going above the knee.

*Go for accessories that polish off your look like long ropes of pearls you can tie, knotted or fringed shawls and cloche or picture hats.

*  The 1920s was the era of a dropped waist that sat either on the hips or fell into no waistline at all found in the shift and chemise styles.

*If you're going for authenticity and your hair is long (like Lady Mary and Sybil), wear it in a styled chignon.  A hairdresser will know how to add those dramatic rolls and Marcelling (deep waves).  If your hair is short try to get it going into a Bob. Great hairstyling lays the just the right groundwork so you can add a great headpiece or veil.

*The costuming on Downton Abbey is top drawer so look for exquisite workmanship.  For me the standard 1920s silhouette isn't complimentary to most women unless they're built like Audrey Hepburn or the actresses who play the Crawley sisters.  It was however an era known for incredible detailing on clothing such as intricate smocking and hand embroidery, lace insets, pleats, draping, etc.


CREDITS

Photo 3 via Elle UK
Photo 4 via
Photo 5 via Fanpop