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Marie Antoinette Style at the V&A: A Close Look at the Textiles

Marie Antoinette Style Exhibition

I went to this exhibition expecting to be mildly interested. Eighteenth-century French court life is not really my territory. Too gilded, too tragic, too far from the making practices I usually spend time with.

I came out genuinely fascinated.

Almost nothing in the exhibition is confirmed to have belonged to Marie Antoinette herself. What the V&A have done instead is gather textiles and dress from other collections that are close enough to what she would have worn, and the effect is remarkable. It stops being a relic show and becomes something full of life and extraordinary craft skill.

What I focused on

I decided to ignore shoes, fans, jewellery, and the execution galleries entirely, and spend my time with the fabrics and dress. There is a lot to look at: state dress with silver-wrapped embroidery so heavy it must have been nearly impossible to walk in; the painted warp silks she favoured for daily wear; a commission sample that makes you understand immediately why her annual dress budget topped the equivalent of £1,500,000

The film goes through the pieces in some detail.

The Gallery of photographs

I took a lot of close-up detail shots while I was there. The embroidery and fabric construction really only make sense at that scale.  You can click through and browse at your leisure.

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Comments: 3 (Add)

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Kelly Vriezen

What an amazing exhibit! I love the V & A. It never disappoints. You are so fortunate to have experienced this inspiring exhibit! Thanks for capturing it's beauty for us, Jane.
BTW, I love your scarf. Can you share the pattern and fiber details sometime? It looks like a great travel project. ?

SnapdragonJane

In reply to Kelly Vriezen
I think you will be disappointed in the pattern Kelly! It was a panic knit - I was travelling as a passenger and needed something to knit over a 2 hour journey and didn't have anything small to take. So I took a 50g ball of nubbly 4 ply silk an a 3mm needle, cast on 14 stitches and knitter garter stitch until the yarn ran out . . . .
I then didn't like the colour as it was a bit meh, so I put it in an onion dye bath and it went a nice mustard colour. J x
Kelly Vriezen

In reply to SnapdragonJane
And isn't it wonderful that your ingenuity (spurred on by a dose of frustration. ?) eventually lead to a stunning accessory. I believe serendipity is often the best muse!
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