- Mother and Child
Mother and Child - Love of Home
Young lady smelling a rose that she has received - Lady writing a love letter
Young lady writing - illustrating magnetic influences
animal magnetism is supposed to radiate from and encircle every human being - Found upon the doorstep
Woman opening the door to find a baby in a basket - Confidence
Two young ladies talking - Children Should be taught early the lessons of Propriety and Good Manners
Mother and daughter - An easy-going disposition
A cat eating from the counter while a lady ignores the cat - Lady Reading the Bible
Lady Reading the Bible - Young Lady writing
Young Lady writing - two walking dresses as well as an indoors and evening dress 1836
two walking dresses as well as an indoors and evening dress 1836 - The costumes given for 1835 are indoor and walking dresses
The costumes given for 1835 are indoor and walking dresses - The costumes given for 1835 are a nursemaid and children
The costumes given for 1835 are a nursemaid and children - Hairstyles for 1836
Hairstyles for 1836 - Carriage Costume
Fashion 1850 Dress of bright apple-green silk; the skirt with three deep flounces pinked at the edges. The corsage high and plain. Mantelet of very pale lilac silk, trimmed with two rows of lace de laine of the same color, and each row of lace surmounted by passementerie. The lace extends merely round the back part of the mantelet, and the fronts are trimmed with passementerie only. Bonnet of white crinoline, with rows of lilac ribbon set on in bouillonnées. The bonnet is lined with white crape, and the under-trimming consists of bouquets of lilac and white flowers. Straw-colored kid gloves. White silk parasol. - Moldavian Style
It is designed chiefly for a rich riding-dress, it being too long in the skirt for the promenade, and not convenient for the drawing-room. It is called the Moldavian Style; a petite veste of dark green cloth entirely covered with an embroidery of lace imitating guipure royal, and displaying the shape to the greatest perfection. The skirt is very ample and cut in a novel manner so as to fall in long folds like an antique drapery. The front is ornamented with an apron-trimming of deep lace. The sleeves are demi-long; the hands and wrists covered by long white gloves. When in full dress for the saddle, a gray beaver hat is worn, the brim low in front, and turned up at the sides, and ornamented with a long, twisted ostrich feather; cambric collar and manchettes (ruffles) each closed by a double button of rubies or other precious stones. - Marriage dress
Bridal dress for the marriage ceremony - 1850 Robe of white poult de soie. The skirt very full, and ornamented in front with five rows of lace, finished at each end with bows of white satin. The rows of lace are of graduated lengths, the lower row being about a quarter and a half long, and the upper one not more than five or six inches. - Walking Dress
Fashion 1868 Silk, trimmed with three ruffles. Above there, and extending up each gore, is a fancy silk braid to match color of dress. - Dress of Black Silk
Fashion 1868 The lower skirt is trimmed with bands of satin stitched with white. The upper skirt is trimmed with two satin bands and edged with a narrow fringe. The skirt is open at the side with revers, and laced across with cord and tassels. - Expectation
Expectation - June Roses
Young lady - Lady reading
Lady reading - A Woman's Head
A woman’s head From the original drawing by Edwin Howland Blashfield - Young Lady Writing
Young Lady Writing - Domestic scene
Domestic scene - The Grandmother
OLd Lady - Bushwoman
Bushwoman - Ladies' Fashions for February 1852
We are in the midst of the gay season, but its modes, until disturbed by the approach of spring, were fixed before the holidays, and for the most part have already been reported. The Paris journals, we may remark, however, dwell much on the unusual ascendency of black, in furs, velvets, cloths, and other heavy stuffs, for walking and carriage dresses, and on the greater demand than in recent winters for every species of embroidery. - Old lady with beard
Old lady with beard - Woman in hat
Woman in hat - Girl with Umbrella
Lady sitting in a carriage with an umbrella smoking a cigarette - Crinoline
- Paris Evening Dress 1833
- Promenade Costume 1833
Promenade Costume 1833 - Walking Dress 1810
The Empire gown is figured in the illustration of a walking dress, 1810. It lasted practically until the advent of the crinoline in the forties, when it finally disappeared. - lady with hat
- Curls
Young lady with curls - i 189
- Lady
Lady in Hat - Woman with hat
- lady 2
- Lady 4
- An Egyptian Woman
An Egyptian Woman - When you read do not bend over
- Grandma
- Helen Johnson
- Lady with fan
- Aren’t there a couple of young men in there with Clara
“Aren’t there a couple of young men in there with Clara?” “No, only one. There isn’t a sound.” - The Rose Queen
by G. D. LESLIE, R.A. (From “Academy Notes,” 1893.) - Tiresome Dog
“Tiresome Dog,” by E. K. Johnson. - Badminton in the studio
From the painting by R.W. MacBeth, A.R.A. - Ashes of Roses
This careful drawing, from the painting by Mr. Boughton, in the Royal Academy, reproduced by the Dawson process, is interesting for variety of treatment and indication of textures in pen and ink. It is like the picture, but it has also the individuality of the draughtsman, as in line engraving. Size of drawing about 6½ x 3½ in - 1916 Woman
- Young lady checking hair in mirror
- Young lady
- Young woman
- Young woman
- Yes or No
- Young lady
- Young lady