'A Lady in Full Dress in Augt. 1770'
1 of 36 portraits by The Lady's Magazine
© National Portrait Gallery, London
'A Lady in Full Dress in Augt. 1770'
published in The Lady's Magazine
etching, published August 1770
6 1/2 in. x 4 3/8 in. (165 mm x 110 mm) paper size
Acquired, 1916
Reference Collection
NPG D47481
Artistback to top
- The Lady's Magazine (1770-1832), Magazine. Artist or producer associated with 36 portraits.
This portraitback to top
The first fashion plate from The Lady's Magazine, which was the first magazine to regularly issue fashion plates. No description accompanied it.
Subjects & Themesback to top
- Fans
- Fashion Plates: Activities and occasions - Full dress
- Fashion Plates: Dresses - Closed robes
- Fashion Plates: Dresses - Stomachers
- Fashion Plates: Hair - Toupées
- Fashion Plates: Headwear - Dress caps
- Fashion Plates: Headwear - Lappets
- Fashion Plates: Trimmings and ornamentation - Furbelows
- Fashion Plates: Trimmings and ornamentation - Lace
- Fashion Plates: Trimmings and ornamentation - Robings
- Fashion Plates: Undergarments - Hoop-petticoats
- Gloves and gauntlets
- Jewellery - Earrings
- Jewellery - Hair ornaments
- Jewellery - Pendants and necklaces
Events of 1770back to top
Current affairs
Augustus FitzRoy, 3rd Duke of Grafton resigns as Prime Minister and is succeeded by Frederick North, 2nd Earl of Guilford.Art and science
Oliver Goldsmith publishes his poem The Deserted Village.Philosopher and politician Edmund Burke publishes Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents discussing the limits of the King's authority.
17-year-old Thomas Chatterton, later hailed as a significant poet, commits suicide in a London garret.
Thomas Gainsborough paints his portrait of Jonathan Buttall, which later becomes known as The Blue Boy.
International
'Townshend duties' on imports into the colonies are repealed, except for the duty on tea. However, this concession is soon followed by the Boston Massacre, in which British troops fire into an unruly crowd in Boston, killing five.Captain Cook reaches the eastern coast of Australia, at a place which he names Botany Bay. He discovers the Great Barrier Reef when HMS Endeavour runs onto it. Cook claims New South Wales for the British.
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