1857 Eunice Newton Foote - Mulberry
1857 Eunice Newton Foote - Mulberry
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1850s Geometric Cotton Dress Fabric
Product Description
This structured geometric design is inspired by mid-19th-century printed cottons preserved in the Cooper Hewitt Museum collections. The bold red motifs and finely repeated lines reflect the visual discipline and decorative richness that defined many French textile designs of the 1850s.
The composition combines ornamental borders with a strong geometric repeat, allowing the pattern to read clearly across larger garment panels. Its balanced structure makes it especially effective in garments where rhythm, symmetry, and silhouette are central to the overall impression.
Well suited for
Ideal for round dresses, day dresses, and historically inspired garments of the 1850s. The design also works well for fitted bodices, skirts, and decorative textile projects requiring a clear visual rhythm and strong period character.
Design & Historical Context
The design draws inspiration from a French sample book dated around 1857, containing numerous printed cotton examples. Such collections documented the wide variety of geometric and floral combinations used in Victorian everyday fashion, where printed cottons offered both practicality and decorative sophistication.
Eunice Newton Foote (1819–1888) was an American scientist, inventor, and women’s rights campaigner. She was the first known scientist to demonstrate that certain gases warm when exposed to sunlight.
Her work anticipated later understanding of the greenhouse effect, making her an important yet long-overlooked figure in the history of science and women’s intellectual achievements.
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