Wealthy Edwardian Fashion 1910s Archive Film 1017399
>> YOUR LINK HERE: ___ http://youtube.com/watch?v=AcM9CwQWmIQ
This film is available to license from our website at Huntley Film Archives, by searching for film 1017399 in our Film # search bar: • https://www.huntleyarchives.com/ • Female fashions for the wealthy of the 1910s and Edwardian era. • Three women wearing summer dresses of the 1910s stand looking at the camera, they are in a garden or terrace drinking through straws from glasses, they are all wearing wide brimmed hats and carry different handbags or purses over their corseted, long gowns, the middle lady is also carrying a parasol, they giggle at the camera. • A woman seated in a deck chair on the Palace Pier (Looks more 1900s than 1910s), Brighton, she is wearing a long gown and a wide brimmed hat, she is also holding a parasol, a smart gentleman in a dark jacket and pale trousers approaches her, taking off his hat as he gives greeting, she gets up and takes his hand. • Three women walking through a park or garden (only a hedge is visible), they are all wearing more unusual post World War I fashions, with quite loosely cut tweed or woollen coats with drop waists, worn over long skirts, two of the women are carrying parasols and they all wear wide brimmed hats, they walks toward the camera then pause and turn to each other 'chatting'. • In the next scenario, three wealthy women in the latest couture fashions take tea together in a studio garden, two of the models are sitting at a table covered with a table cloth, they look up at the third young woman walking around in front of them, they are all wearing hats with perky feathers on them, as the standing woman walks away, we see the bow detail on her bodice or blouse and the fact she is wearing a hobble skirt, she walks out of shot and one of the sitting women then stands, putting on feather bower type wrap, possibly a bleached fur, she stands momentarily so we see the front of her matching coat and skirt and her dark coloured purse. • Three women wearing summery, hobble skirt, style attire appear from a cave opening, possibly on a beach, they are all wearing variants on a gathered and striped style of dress of the 1910s, they walks off laughing together. • A graceful woman wearing winter clothes stands looking out over a river, a boat of rowers goes past below her in the distance, she is wrapped nearly head to toe in fur, she turns her head slightly towards us so we see her peaked hat with feather sticking up vertically at the front. • Head and shoulders shot of a slowly rotating female hat and hair model with bold eyebrows; she is wearing a narrow brimmed but high crowned straw hat adorned with two plumes of pale coloured feathers, possibly ostrich feathers, while her waved hair has been pinned beside her face and low at the back, the hat places at a slanted angle on her head. As we reach the back of her head, the film cuts to a different model who is modelling the classically inspired hair style of the 1910s, with copious amounts of fake hair, or extensions to create the wavy volume, as she turns we see more of the decorative hairband and spray of feathers, she smiles. As she continues to turn, the film cuts to another model wearing another Grecian inspired hair style of the time, with large loops of twisted hair coiled onto the back of her head, with more waved sections over the forehead. As she turns, the film cuts again, this time to a model with even more wavy hair, pinned u underneath an embroidered cap placed on the back of the head, as she turns, we see her face, framed by a short, waved fringe or bangs and voluminous curls on each side. The last woman is a more full faces model, unlike the others, she isn't rotating, and instead she nods to the camera as if in greeting, smiling as she does so, her face is framed by dark, thick hair rolled back around her head. • Huntley Film Archives is a film library holding tens of thousands of films. The large majority of the films are documentaries. Films cover a wide range of subjects and production dates range from the 1890’s to the 2020’s. As with all libraries we make no judgement on the content of our holdings and make them available for educational purposes for all to see. Films may have content or express opinions some may think inappropriate or offensive, but it is not the work of a library to censor educational resources. Films should be viewed with historical objectivity and within a context relevant to the times in which they were produced
#############################
