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On February
25, 1978, Shannon Rodgers purchased a "blue silk robe and
petticoat brocaded in silver, English, 1750," from Cora
Ginsburg Antique Textiles in New York City. At the time, the
dress was configured in a style approximating the 1770s, although
the textile was probably created around 1750. It was included
in the original Silverman/Rodgers gift that established the
Kent State University Museum. When I first saw the dress in
1993, I noticed machine stitching, something definitely not
possible in the 18th century, and it piqued my curiosity about
the history of the dress. I decided to try to discover whether
or not the original shape and style of the dress might still
exist under all the modern stitching. Once the sewing machine
stitching and modern thread had been removed, the dress fell
into 57 pieces. In 1995 I presented a description of the dress
and a hypothesis on reconstruction at a symposium at Winterthur,
but nothing more happened to the project until I showed the
dress to my Honors History of Costume I class in 2003, and asked
if anyone wanted a project. Kristina Hill volunteered, and chose
to use her work on the dress as her Senior Honors Thesis.
We began
to examine the dress during the summer of 2005. Christine Paulocik,
Costume Conservator at the Costume Institute of the Metropolitan
Museum of Art, tested a piece of the fabric to see if it could
be wet cleaned before we proceeded to wash the pieces. Gary
Harwood, Coordinator of Photography at Kent State, photographed
a complete pattern repeat and we copied it until we had fifteen
yards of xeroxed "fabric" so that we would have a
guide for trying to find the original placement of the pieces.
All summer we worked with the placement of the pieces as if
they were a part of a large jigsaw puzzle. It became clear early
on that my hypothesis presented at Winterthur was incorrect
and that we were looking at quite a different dress. Once we
had each piece placed on the pattern repeats we discovered that
there were cuts across full fabric widths and all of the cuts
were same length - just the right length to make an eight panel
skirt in a mid-18th-century silhouette. Rita Brown, experienced
in the restoration of 18th-century garments, consulted with
us and encouraged us to continue. Kristina began to stitch the
pieces onto sheer silk crepeline in the skirt lengths that we
had found. We discovered missing sections that Kristina replicated
using the industrial digital embroidery machine at The Fashion
School with the help of Dr. Elizabeth Rhodes and Linda Öhrn-McDaniel.
The digitizing process itself was an important learning experience.
Kristina color coded each type of silver thread used in the
brocade. This was sent to StitchInvaders, a digitizing firm
in New Mexico. Fiber artist Janice Lessman-Moss, Professor of
Art at Kent State, dyed new silk to blend with the old. Various
embroidery threads were tested to see what would best blend
with the old silver of the dress. There were mysteries, of course,
and decisions to make regarding the final placement once the
eight panels were assembled. We laid the panels out and discovered
that there were two distinct pattern repeats that when alternated,
created a serpentine pattern across the width of the skirt.
As we placed the panels, we discovered crease lines that were
consistent across the panels indicating that we had most probably
discovered the original configuration.
My curiosity about the dress and my desire to reconstruct it,
were the direct result of my years working with Elizabeth Lawrence,
then the Master Restorer at the Costume Institute. Liz had an
intuitive approach to 18th-century garments that she called
"sleuthing at the seams." She worked on dresses patiently
for years, waiting until they "spoke" to her, looking
for the evidence of former seams, former pleats, former "lives."
It is the memory of Liz, her wisdom and her patience that have
been very much a part of this undertaking. It is the very real,
hard and patient work of Kristina Hill that has brought the
project to fruition.
Jean L.
Druesedow, Director
Kent State University Museum
This
exhibition has been supported in part by an Ohio Arts Council
Sustainability Grant
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