Skip to product information
1 of 5

1785 Marie-Madeleine Guimard

1785 Marie-Madeleine Guimard

Regular price 285.00 SEK
Regular price Sale price 285.00 SEK
Unit price 285.00 kr  per  m
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.

Design reference nr:

SKU:48930182

1780 French Cotton Cape

Product Description

This design is inspired by a French woman’s cotton cape dated to approximately 1785–1820. The pattern features small decorative floral and abstract motifs on a warm brown ground, reflecting the printed cotton textiles that became increasingly fashionable in late 18th-century and early 19th-century wardrobes.

The design carries the practical elegance of the cotton revolution, when printed cottons became desirable for lighter garments, informal wear and fashionable accessories. Its earthy colour palette, scattered motifs and delicate ornamental rhythm make it suitable for historically inspired clothing with a refined late 18th-century character.

Well suited for

Well suited for women’s capes, short cloaks, caraco jackets, petticoats, waistcoats, historical accessories, costume interpretation, reenactment garments and museum-inspired sewing projects. The design may also work beautifully for small textile details, linings, decorative panels and historically inspired interiors.

Design & Historical Context

Cotton capes were part of fashionable women’s dress in late 18th-century France. While wool remained important for warmth, printed cotton offered a lighter and more decorative alternative. This design reflects the growing popularity of printed cottons during the decades around 1780–1820, when European taste, global trade and textile innovation reshaped fashion.

Marie-Madeleine Guimard, French ballerina of the late 18th century, cultural reference for 1780s French fashion and printed cotton textiles

Marie-Madeleine Guimard, born in 1743, was a celebrated ballerina at the Paris Opera during the reign of Louis XVI. Her fashionable public image and connection to elite Parisian society reflect the refined decorative culture in which printed cotton garments became increasingly desirable during the late 18th century.

View full details