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Namespace Prefixes

PrefixIRI
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Statements

Subject Item
n4:40c92ecf-0323-599b-8b58-face4a17ed6f
rdf:type
rdf:Statement
rdf:predicate
ecrm:P65_shows_visual_item
rdf:object
n6:743
rdf:subject
n2:aaec4caa-e8f7-38b1-8f5b-ee37857ac412
prov:wasGeneratedBy
n11:40c92ecf-0323-599b-8b58-face4a17ed6f
silk:L18
0.64660000801086425781
Subject Item
n2:aaec4caa-e8f7-38b1-8f5b-ee37857ac412
rdf:type
ecrm:E22_Man-Made_Object
rdfs:label
1862~, United Kingdom
rdfs:comment
This dress is machine-embroidered, but hand sewn. The first machine for embroidery was invented in France. Examples were first brought to Britain in the 1820s. Machine embroidery developed for men’s waistcoats and women’s dresses throughout the 1840s and 1850s. Various inventions of machines for sewing seams occurred in the 1840s, but they did not become commercially available until the late 1850s. It was several decades before the sewing machine was widely used in homes and by professional dressmakers. Embroidered corded silk dress, Great Britain, ca. 1862. Dress of brown corded silk trimmed with black machine embroidery. It consists of a close-fitting, short-waisted bodice and a full skirt. The bodice has medium-wide long sleeves and a waistband, to which the skirt is attached in deep, double box-pleats. It fastens with black glass stud buttons. It is boned, lined with glazed cotton and faced with tarleton. The epaulettes, cuffs, bodice and skirt border are trimmed with machine embroidery in an interlinked design of leaves and flowers. It is carried out in black chain stitch and velvet appliqué.
owl:sameAs
n13:O13840
dc:identifier
T.22-1973
ecrm:P3_has_note
Dress of brown corded silk trimmed with black machine embroidery. It consists of a close-fitting, short-waisted bodice and a full skirt. The bodice has medium-wide long sleeves and a waistband, to which the skirt is attached in deep, double box-pleats. It fastens with black glass stud buttons. It is boned, lined with glazed cotton and faced with tarleton. The epaulettes, cuffs, bodice and skirt border are trimmed with machine embroidery in an interlinked design of leaves and flowers. It is carried out in black chain stitch and velvet appliqué. Embroidered corded silk dress, Great Britain, ca. 1862. This dress is machine-embroidered, but hand sewn. The first machine for embroidery was invented in France. Examples were first brought to Britain in the 1820s. Machine embroidery developed for men’s waistcoats and women’s dresses throughout the 1840s and 1850s. Various inventions of machines for sewing seams occurred in the 1840s, but they did not become commercially available until the late 1850s. It was several decades before the sewing machine was widely used in homes and by professional dressmakers.
ecrm:P65_shows_visual_item
n6:743
ecrm:P138i_has_representation
n9:a58e07c7-0773-3ad9-9d76-bf14d9544f16
ecrm:P102_has_title
1862~, United Kingdom