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1815 Baroness Grenville

1815 Baroness Grenville

Regular price €25,20 EUR
Regular price Sale price €25,20 EUR
Unit price €25,20  per  m
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Design reference nr:

SKU:48500052

Product Description

Special Special – Cornucopia Printed Day Dress Fabric

This historical cotton voile fabric design is inspired by elegant Regency-era day dresses from the period around 1815–1825. The pattern features flowing brown stripe arrangements combined with delicate floral cornucopia motifs printed across a soft light ground, creating a refined and graceful early 19th-century appearance.

The original historical dress featured a wide square neckline, short puff sleeves with ruffled trim, inset waistband, cartridge-pleated skirt, and lightweight cotton construction typical of fashionable Regency daywear. The flowing stripe layout and decorative cornucopia motifs create beautiful movement in gathered skirts, puff sleeves, petticoats, and softly draped historical garments.

This reconstructed design works especially well for Regency gowns, Empire dresses, round gowns, petticoats, Spencer jackets, wrappers, historical day dresses, theatre costumes, reenactment clothing, and museum-inspired sewing projects.

The fabric is particularly suitable for cotton voile, where the lightweight structure helps recreate the airy movement and elegant silhouette associated with Regency fashion. The directional stripe pattern also enhances cartridge pleating, gathered waistlines, and flowing skirt construction.

Well suited for

– Regency day dresses and round gowns
– Empire dresses and transitional fashion
– Petticoats and gathered skirts
– Spencer jackets and historical wrappers
– Puff sleeves and cartridge pleating
– Historical costume and reenactment clothing
– Theatre costumes and museum reproduction sewing
– Historical interiors and decorative textile projects

Design & Historical Context

During the late Regency period, lightweight printed cotton fabrics became highly fashionable for elegant daytime dress. Floral stripe arrangements and cornucopia-inspired motifs reflected the neoclassical taste popular throughout Europe during the early 19th century.

Historical gowns from this period often combined soft cotton voile fabrics with gathered bodices, puff sleeves, inset waistbands, and flowing cartridge-pleated skirts designed to create graceful movement and refined femininity. Directional printed textiles such as this were especially effective for dresses where the stripe arrangement enhanced the silhouette and construction of the garment itself.

Anne Grenville Baroness Grenville Regency portrait

Reference Person: Anne Grenville, Baroness Grenville (1772–1864) was a respected British aristocrat of the late Georgian and Regency period, admired for her elegance, intelligence, and refined cultural taste. Her neoclassical appearance and fashionable world reflect the same graceful Regency aesthetic associated with elegant cotton voile day dresses and early 19th-century printed textiles.

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