Preview
Creator
L.P. Hollander & Co. of Paris and Boston
Date Created
1880s
Subject
Women's costume accessories; Worn costume accessories; Headgear
Description
1880s. Imported capote style bonnet constructed from buckram, loosely draped with chocolate brown velvet, no distinct brim.
The face opening is wired to shape and is enclosed by a 3.8 cm / 1.5 in. trim of jet beads sewn onto net in a diamond pattern. The lightly gathered velvet emerges from beneath the trim and is arranged in loose folds on the crown, gathered together tightly at the back of the head near the bottom of the bonnet. The fabric is pulled upward from that tight gather into a puff approximately 7.6 cm / 3 in. high above the top of the head.
The top and top sides of the bonnet are decorated with wide brown, orange and dark teal silk satin ribbons in bows and gathers. Short ties of brown pleated silk ribbon emerge from the front corners and have pinholes from having being pinned shut rather than tied.
Velvet lines the edges of the bonnet interior, with cream silk sewn to it to line the majority of the crown. This is finished in back with a hem forming a channel for a silk ribbon, along which the lining is gathered to an opening that reveals the milliner’s label stamped in gold on white silk at the back panel of the bonnet. Professionally made. Hand-sewn.
Extent
Depth: 11.4 cm / 4.5 in. (depth of crown)
Height: 12.7 cm / 5 in. (height of structural crown)
Height: 21.6 cm / 8.5 in. (height of crown with puff)
Length: 23 cm / 9 in. (length of tie)
Provenance
Gift of Margaret Hamilton Ffrost and Elizabeth Rollins Ffrost. The bonnet is stamped with the label “L.P. Hollander & Co. Paris Boston U.S.”. The bonnet was likely made in or near Paris, France. It was purchased in Boston, Massachusetts, and likely worn by Martha Hale Low Ffrost (1842-1925), mother of the donors, in and around Dover, New Hampshire. L.P. Hollander opened on Boylston Street in Boston in 1848, with dressmaker Maria Theresa Baldwin, wife of Louis P. Hollander, selling children’s wear. She soon added ladies wear to the business and sent her sons to Europe, particularly to the style centers of London and Paris, to bring back imported fashions. At the time Martha Ffrost purchased and wore this bonnet, L.P. Hollander was a prominent luxury fashion importer. (https://vintagefashionguild.org/label-resource/hollander-lp/ accessed on 2010-02-11).
Museum Number
535
Publisher
University of New Hampshire Library
Medium
Silk velvet, silk, jet, silk ribbon, buckram, wire
Contributor
Astrida Schaeffer, photographer/curator
Date Digitized
2-7-2019
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License
Ffrost-Sawyer history
Keywords
Women’s garments, Accessories worn, Head, Headgear, Hats, Bonnets (hats), Capote (bonnet), 1880s, Paris, France, Boston, Massachusetts, Dover, New Hampshire, United States, Crown (hat component), Gathers (textile process), Bows (costume accessories), Silk (textile), Velvet (fabric weave), Buckram, Wire, Jet (coal), Ribbon (material), Brown (color), Teal (color), Deep orange, Gold (color), Milliner, Label (identifying artifact), Hand-sewn, Hamilton Ffrost (donor), Rollins Ffrost (donor), Ffrost (donor), Frost (donor)
Comments
The Irma G. Bowen Historic Clothing Collection digital catalog was produced by the UNH Library Digital Collection Initiative, supported in part by a grant from the Mooseplate program and New Hampshire State Council on the Arts. Additional funding provided by the E. Ruth Buxton Stephenson Memorial Fund.
Photography copyright, Astrida Schaeffer.