This chapter introduces the aniline dyes of the 1850s and 1860s, along with new words used for the colors created with these dyes. It then addresses how colorists, the dye chemists employed by textile manufacturers, and fashion journalists writing for middle-class women discussed fashionable colors. Both groups used a range of fashionable color terms and distinguished carefully among available colors. The chapter concludes by examining the increasing availability of branded dye products for domestic and commercial markets in the mid-nineteenth century. The chapter argues that both the language of fashionable color and the variety of new dye products linked male colorists and female fashion consumers
Red. serii : Wodziński, PiotrThe textile industry which is stili the largest market within the color...
Nineteenth-century photography is usually thought of in terms of ‘black and white’ images, but inten...
This article appeared in The Modern Priscilla magazine, October, 1919. It was written by Harriet C....
Great changes characterized the mid- to late nineteenth century in the field of dye chemistry, inclu...
This chapter examines color in clothing and body decoration from the early nineteenth century to the...
In October 1851, the fashion news report in the American periodical Godey’s Lady’s Book and Magazine...
From the middle of the 19th century, fashionable garments for women, which had previously been restr...
Mid-nineteenth-century fashion advice frequently included references to the suitable and pleasing us...
The discovery and subsequent industrialisation of aniline dyes in the second half of the nineteenth ...
This article addresses questions about the use of strong colours, particularly red, in aesthetic fas...
Color speaks a powerful cultural language, conveying political, sexual, and economic messages that, ...
We live in a world of colour. Today, materials can be dec-orated in an almost limitless range of col...
Colour has always been of significance in the fashion industry and has entered our everyday language...
Natural dyes and dyeing from XVIIth century to the birth of synthetic dyes. After historical conside...
International audienceThis paper presents some aspects of the contribution to the history of colors ...
Red. serii : Wodziński, PiotrThe textile industry which is stili the largest market within the color...
Nineteenth-century photography is usually thought of in terms of ‘black and white’ images, but inten...
This article appeared in The Modern Priscilla magazine, October, 1919. It was written by Harriet C....
Great changes characterized the mid- to late nineteenth century in the field of dye chemistry, inclu...
This chapter examines color in clothing and body decoration from the early nineteenth century to the...
In October 1851, the fashion news report in the American periodical Godey’s Lady’s Book and Magazine...
From the middle of the 19th century, fashionable garments for women, which had previously been restr...
Mid-nineteenth-century fashion advice frequently included references to the suitable and pleasing us...
The discovery and subsequent industrialisation of aniline dyes in the second half of the nineteenth ...
This article addresses questions about the use of strong colours, particularly red, in aesthetic fas...
Color speaks a powerful cultural language, conveying political, sexual, and economic messages that, ...
We live in a world of colour. Today, materials can be dec-orated in an almost limitless range of col...
Colour has always been of significance in the fashion industry and has entered our everyday language...
Natural dyes and dyeing from XVIIth century to the birth of synthetic dyes. After historical conside...
International audienceThis paper presents some aspects of the contribution to the history of colors ...
Red. serii : Wodziński, PiotrThe textile industry which is stili the largest market within the color...
Nineteenth-century photography is usually thought of in terms of ‘black and white’ images, but inten...
This article appeared in The Modern Priscilla magazine, October, 1919. It was written by Harriet C....