I'm not watching #MarieAntoinettePBS and I wasn't going to nitpick the costumes; I don't think that's very interesting or useful. Historical films are not (nor should they be) documentaries, and I don’t want to come across as a cranky pedant or yuck someone else’s yum. HOWEVER….
A few people have sent me this lewk and I'm going to do a 🧵, because it's something I've researched and written about extensively and because it shows how even well-intentioned, well-budgeted historical costuming can go off the rails when you don't HIRE👏FASHION👏HISTORIANS👏.
"Whhyyyy is Marie-Antoinette wearing a cold-shoulder dress?" is not the question you should be asking. This is meant to represent a real gown called a grand habit. It was worn at court and only at court on formal and ceremonial occasions. At right is a Swedish royal wedding gown.
From the get-go, the grand habit (far left) had nothing to do with fashion. It was a hybrid style invented by King Louis XIV in the 1660s. As a cranky old man, he disliked the newfangled mantua (seated, at right) and wanted to revive the more formal womenswear of his youth.
Instead of a chic, sleeved gown worn over a petticoat (meaning a skirt) and stomacher (the triangular piece that covered the stomach), it consisted of a sleeveless, off-the-shoulder, back-lacing bodice reinforced with whalebone (meaning sewn-in strips of baleen, like a corset)...
...a separate petticoat, and a long, detachable train, often invisible from the front. This is a grand habit made for a 23-inch tall fashion doll, now in the Fashion Museum, Bath. The bare shoulders, back lacing, and 3-piece construction were absolutely unique to court dress.
The upper arms were covered by 3-tiered lace sleeves called manches de cour (court sleeves). All lace was handmade, so this was a huge expense on top of the already huge expense of the gown itself. Again, something you'd ONLY wear at court--if you could afford to go at all.
The trimmings, colors, fabrics, and skirt size and shape fluctuated with fashion and the seasons, but the basic elements stayed the same for more than a century, until the Revolution. Court dress was not supposed to make you look young, thin, or attractive; it made you look rich.
Even Marie-Antoinette found court dress old-fashioned, weird-looking, overpriced, and impractical. So props to the designer for going there at all--most costume dramas omit it, including #Bridgerton; Queen Charlotte famously mandated hoops at court long past their sell-by date.
The Coppola Marie-Antoinette TRIED to do court dress--but this is just a regular, one-piece 18th-century open robe with a stomacher and square neckline to which they've added tiers of sleeve ruffles.
Similarly, the Outlander wedding gown was clearly inspired by both the grand habit worn at virtually every European court and the English court dress of the 1740s, called a stiff bodied gown, which was less archaic but still distinct from modern fashion--notably the boned bodice.
Where #MarieAntoinettePBS went wrong was in not understanding the construction of the grand habit--which is not surprising since there are only a handful of them left intact, and they're mostly in Swedish and Russian museums, including this royal wedding gown in Stockholm.
Thus, they made a one-piece cold-shoulder gown rather than an off-the-shoulder bodice with a separate skirt and train, accessorized by a palatine (or tippet), a decorative scarf typically made of embellished gauze, lace, crêpe, tulle, or, in the winter, fur.
Sometimes you get the same effect from curls (often false) or the black lace lappets frequently worn with court dress. Again: NOT STRAPS.
And this is what I mean by going off the rails. Someone looked at a real 1770s portrait of the real Marie-Antoinette and copied it in 2D rather than trying to understand it in 3D. It's like trying to design a tuxedo when you've only seen them in pictures and coming up with this:
Most costume designers like to do their own research, and I don’t blame them—research is fun! It’s inspiring! But you don’t know what you don’t know, and—as my colleague @Hannah_Greig says—there’s a big difference between making (informed) choices and making (dumb) mistakes.
I’ve done historical consulting for filmmakers, authors, and illustrators, and it always starts with a tutorial on what the characters REALLY would have worn. Where it goes from there isn’t up to me, but I stick around to answer questions and flag problems, like this whole deal:
If you’re interested in 18th-century French fashion, court dress, and/or Marie-Antoinette, there’s an award-winning book for that! @yalepress#MarieAntoinettePBS
It’s time for #Bridgerton S3, Part 1! Sure, the frocks are a lot of fun, but there are also paintings! Let's take a look. (Spoilers ahead, obviously.) 🧵
Once again, the Bridgertons are getting dressed up for court. By this time (1815, tho the book is set in 1824) knee-length breeches were out of style. After the French Revolution, working-class trousers replaced aristocratic "culottes" in fashion; hence the term “sans-culottes.”
But formal dress changed slowly, then as now, and black tailcoats and breeches continued to be worn at the British court into the 20th century; they're still seen today on some ceremonial occasions (but NEVER with boots, Colin!) The court suit in LACMA’s collection is from 1858.
The #BridgertonS3 trailer has arrived! Colin has clearly been taking fashion inspo from the Duke of Hastings and I am HERE for it. But let's look at the paintings!
Once again, Queen Charlotte's throne room is played by the Double Cube Room at Wilton House, with Anthony van Dyck's 1635 portrait of the 4th Earl of Pembroke and his family, his biggest canvas. The Tate has a fascinating look at the work's messy dynamics: tate.org.uk/tate-etc/issue…
Cressida and Eloise look like they just stepped out of a Regency fashion plate:
I’m looking forward to this—I *love* a sweeping historical epic and I don’t know/care very much about Napoleon, so hopefully I won’t be distracted by the inevitable historical inaccuracies. Costume is not and should not be history, but few things jumped out of me, good and bad:🧵
A lot of Napoleon’s clothes and uniforms survive, including this tricolor sash he wore in Egypt, likely brought there by an Indian trader. It has the boteh or pinecone motif, originally Persian but known in the West as paisley, because imitations were woven in Paisley, Scotland.
French soldiers took these shawls home as souvenirs, launching a trend. Josephine wasn’t a fan at first, but eventually amassed hundreds, even making them into gowns. “Kashmir” shawls mimicked classical drapery, lending warmth and visual interest to high-waisted white sheaths.
Another field trip to see “Guo Pei: Art of Couture” at the Bowers Museum. I saw their 2019 show “Guo Pei: Couture Beyond” and this was completely different! But also worth seeing for the shoes alone:
Pei is the only designer whose clothes I can look at and have NO idea what I’m looking at:
New costume rotation at the @AcademyMuseum! I made a special trip to see Elizabeth Taylor’s velvet-violet-trimmed Edith Head debutante gown from “A Place in the Sun” (1951), which launched a million prom dresses. I wrote about it in my @StMartinsPress book Skirts. But look …. 👀
HELLO, JARETH.
Also fun: Mary Pickford’s “Little Lord Fauntleroy” suit (she played both Cedric AND his mother!), Halle Berry’s Elie Saab Oscar win gown (also in Skirts!), a bunch of Godfather costumes, and Leo’s “Man in the Iron Mask” Louis XIV suit, complete with the weirdly slicked-back hair.