EditorialWoman in a Crinoline on the Beach of Trouville. Dated: c. 1865. Dimensions: sheet: 14.9 ? 21.6 cm (5 7/8 ? 8 1/2 in.). Medium: watercolor with gouache over graphite on laid paper.
EditorialLa Crinoline (title on object), Woman with hat, sitting under a tree., Fashion plates, anonymous, c. 1860, paper, ink, watercolor (paint), brush, h 205, ? w 248.
EditorialNegative - Pioneer Ball, Gippsland, Victoria, 1935, Female members of a Gippsland family attending a pioneer ball. They are wearing off the shoulder crinoline gowns, fingerless gloves and holding dance cards or bags.
EditorialThe Turnstile. A new machine invented by the enemy of crinoline petticoats, plate 15 from L'exposition Universelle. Honor? Victorin Daumier; French, 1808-1879. Date: 1855. Dimensions: 199 ? 228 mm (image); 279 ? 362 mm (sheet). Lithograph in black on w...
EditorialA Croquet Match, 1862. Victorian gentlemen and ladies playing the fashionable game of croquet. A woman steps on a ball to croquet her male opponent, while another lady shows her ankles under her crinoline skirts. Handcoloured etching by John Leech from...
EditorialDressing for the Ball in 1857. Woman being helped by maids into an inflatable hoop frame to support her crinoline dress. Handcoloured etching by John Leech from Follies of the Year, from Punch?s Pocket Books, Bradbury, London, 1864.
EditorialWoman in a Crinoline on the Beach of Trouville. Dated: c. 1865. Dimensions: sheet: 14.9 ? 21.6 cm (5 7/8 ? 8 1/2 in.). Medium: watercolor with gouache over graphite on laid paper.
EditorialWoman in a Crinoline on the Beach of Trouville. Dated: c. 1865. Dimensions: sheet: 14.9 ? 21.6 cm (5 7/8 ? 8 1/2 in.). Medium: watercolor with gouache over graphite on laid paper.
EditorialA Croquet Match, 1862. Victorian gentlemen and ladies playing the fashionable game of croquet. A woman steps on a ball to croquet her male opponent, while another lady shows her ankles under her crinoline skirts. Handcoloured etching by John Leech from...
EditorialDressing for the Ball in 1857. Woman being helped by maids into an inflatable hoop frame to support her crinoline dress. Handcoloured etching by John Leech from Follies of the Year, from Punch?s Pocket Books, Bradbury, London, 1864.