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'London Fashionable Afternoon Dress'

22 of 36 portraits by The Lady's Magazine

© National Portrait Gallery, London

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'London Fashionable Afternoon Dress'

published in The Lady's Magazine
hand-coloured etching and line engraving, published June 1807
7 3/4 in. x 4 1/2 in. (196 mm x 114 mm) paper size
Acquired, 1930
Reference Collection
NPG D47535

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This portraitback to top

Described in the magazine:
A Dress of jonquil sarsnet or crape; the back made rather high, and the front square; the sleeves puckered, and trimmed with either a fine white lace or trimming to match. Head-dress, a rich lace handkerchief, with a Vandyke border; and the hair fastened with a gilt comb and ornamented with a small sprig or half wreath of artifical flowers in front. White gloves, and jonquil shoes.
The child's dress. - A frock of fine French cambric; the sleeves and bosom richly ornamented with work and border to correspond; trowsers of the same, to match.

Events of 1807back to top

Current affairs

Act is passed abolishing the British slave trade after vigorous campaigning by hundreds of thousands of people led by Thomas Clarkson and championed in parliament by reformer William Wilberforce.
Resignation of 'Ministry of all the Talents'. Whig politician William Henry Cavendish Bentinck, Duke of Portland, succeeds as Prime Minister.

Art and science

Thomas Hope publishes Household Furniture and Interior Decoration; influential in promoting Greek and especially Egyptian models as the epitome of fashionable style.

International

French invasion of Spain and Portugal.
Britain occupies Copenhagen and captures the Danish fleet.
Napoleon begins to wage an economic battle against Britain, recognising the impossibility of victory at sea because of Britain's superior naval power. He aims to close the entire European coastline to British trade.

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