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Category: Les Modes

Posted on March 20, 2012March 6, 2016

French Fashion – 1910

I have many blog entries planned, some on very serious topics like war and health. But I can’t stop looking at “Les Modes.” I promise that after this post, I won’t blog  about “Les Modes” for at least a  week (maybe)

But the dresses are so pretty…

Continue reading “French Fashion – 1910”

Posted on March 19, 2012March 6, 2016

Paris Fashion in 1917

From “Les Modes,” 1917

Continue reading “Paris Fashion in 1917”

Posted on February 16, 2012March 6, 2016

Paris Fashion from the Turn of the Last Century — Les Modes

Some fashion fun from Les Modes in years 1905 – 1908

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Wanna deep dive into Regency history and customs?  Check out my friend Nancy’s Regency Researcher website!

  • ►Antiquated Language and Slang (3)
  • ►Bon Ton and Amusements (23)
  • ►Carriages and Steam (4)
  • ►Cost Of Living Back Then (3)
  • ►Domestic History (34)
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    • ▼Les Modes (13)
      • 1902 Women's Fashions - Les Modes
      • Basking in Beautiful French Fashion from 1908
      • Fashion from Paris - Les Modes February 1907
      • French Fashion - 1910
      • French Fashions from 1905-06
      • Les Modes from 1902
      • Lovely French Fashion from 1909
      • Lovely Gowns and Hats from 1910
      • Lovely Hats and Gowns in Les Modes 1908
      • More Les Modes
      • Paris Fashion from the Turn of the Last Century — Les Modes
      • Paris Fashion in 1917
      • Pretty Dresses and Hats for a Sunday - Les Modes 1907
    • 1860s French Fashions and English Ballroom Etiquette
    • 1870s Hodgepodge: His and Hers Dressing Rooms, Bathing, a Bride's Trousseau, Rules of Mourning, and Many Fashion Illustrations.
    • Beautiful Actresses and Fashions from the Early 1920s
    • Beautiful Friday - 1912 Fashions and The Wild Flower Fairy Book
    • Coz' Every Girl's Crazy 'Bout a Sharp Dressed Man - Men's Fashion in 1844 - Part I
    • Does This Pouf Make My Hair Look Big?
    • Dresses from Les Modes Parisiennes, 1862
    • Fashion from Journal Des Dames et Des Modes 1818 -- Part I
    • Fashion from Journal Des Dames et Des Modes 1818 -- Part II
    • Fashion from Journal Des Dames et Des Modes 1818 -- Part III
    • Fashion Gallery from R. Ackermann's Repository of Fashions in 1829
    • Fashion in Really Old Movies
    • French Fashion from the 1840s.
    • Friday Fashions from Harper's Bazaar 1913
    • Gallery of Men's Fashion from 1837 - 1843
    • General Observations On Gentlemen's Dress For March 1807
    • Getting Presented to Queen Victoria, Paying Social Calls, and Riding Etiquette in the 1870s
    • Hot Fashion Trends for Winter 1816
    • How to Dress Becomingly in Mourning in 1885
    • Lookin' Sharp and Lookin' for Love – Men’s Fashion in 1844 – Part II
    • Lovely Gowns and Hats from 1910
    • Morning Dress, Opera Dress, Murder Dress -- Fashions and Poisons from the Late 1820s
    • On Morning Calls and Hosting Dinner Parties, Balls and Routs in the Late Regency
    • Paris Costumes a Bride and Suggests a Trousseau – 1922
    • Parisian Manners and Fashion in the 1830s
    • Partying at the Royal Society in 1886
    • Photographs of English Fashions from 1893
    • Regency Fun - Happenings and Fashion of the Haut Ton in January 1807
    • The Victorian Gentleman’s Guide To Dressing For Less
    • What was Trending in the Winter of 1824
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Internet Seashells

LaFerriere, Madeleine (fashion designer). 1912. Ball Dress and Evening Cloak. fashion plates. https://library.artstor.org/asset/SS7732095_7732095_12592351.
LaFerriere, Madeleine (fashion designer). 1913. Evening Dress. fashion plates. https://library.artstor.org/asset/SS7732095_7732095_12592439.
“Martha Childs, second woman to complete college course at AU, 1895. ,” AUC Woodruff Library Digital Exhibits, accessed March 15, 2021, https://digitalexhibits.auctr.edu/items/show/411.

The hunters and the [Native Americans] speak of [Yellowstone] with a superstitious fear, and consider it the abode of evil spirits, that is to say, a kind of hell. [Native Americans] seldom approach it without offering some sacrifice, or, at least, without presenting the calumet of peace to the turbulent spirits, that they may be propitious. They declare that the subterranean noises proceed from the forging of warlike weapons: each eruption of earth is, in their eyes, the result of a combat between the infernal spirits, and becomes the monument of a new victory or calamity. Pierre-Jean de Smet. Western Missions And Missionaries: a Series of Letters. 1859

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