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The truth about the white wedding dress
Victorian Wedding Dress in the United States
A History through Paper Dolls
Norma Lu Meehan and Mei
Campbell
The American obsession with weddings and
wedding gowns is evident at least as early as 1850, when the March issue of
Godey's Lady's Book included a colored plate in its feature on bridal
dress. Yet brides who feed the nation's current obsession to the tune of
more than $160 billion annually may be astonished to learn how much things
have changed. Fashion illustrator Norma Lu Meehan and costume curator Mei
Campbell draw upon collections at the Northern Indiana Center for History
and the Museum of Texas Tech University to illuminate the evolution of
wedding dress in the United States from 1859 to 1899. This exquisitely
illustrated work situates the white wedding dress and current perceptions of
tradition within a surprisingly varied and colorful history.
FROM THE BOOK
When Americans think of Victorian
wedding dress . . . we recall antique photographs and tintypes, possibly
family heirlooms or those we've seen in museums. Though these images, like
the gowns on these pages, certainly do not reflect the breadth of American
cultural custom and practice, even in that era, they do reveal how much of
mainstream America--particularly a rising middle class--saw itself and how
it aspired to be seen. We can begin to understand how an increasingly
affluent America became smitten with a British queen and with a fashion
phenomenon that over the next century would become an economic and cultural
force beyond imagining.
Norma Lu Meehan, a
fashion illustrator for forty years, called upon that experience when she
began creating historic costume paper dolls in 1991. She lives in South
Bend, Indiana, where she is a volunteer costume curator at the Northern
Indiana Center for History.
Mei Campbell is curator
of ethnology and textiles at the Museum of Texas Tech University and a
member of the university's graduate faculty of the Center for Advanced
Studies in Museum Science and Heritage Management. Since 2003, she has also
served as adjunct professor at the Fu-Jen Catholic University in Taiwan. She
lives near Lubbock, Texas.
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