Figure 1 - Collar from the 1630s |
At the weekend I visited Platt Hall for the first time, I
had never been to Manchester before but always wanted to visit the Gallery of
Costume. At the moment the 20th century exhibitions are closed,
however the rest of the museum is open, as is the Schiaparelli exhibition. The
Museum has an excellent collection of 17th century garments, many
having belonged to the Filmer family, and these by themselves are worth a
detour. Below I give a flavour of what is on display, the collection extends
well beyond these.
Figure 2 - Whatcombe bodice |
There are two cases of linens covering 1600-1630 and
1630-1660, with whitework and lace collars, sleeves, coif and forehead cloths.
Figure 1 shows one corner of the 1630-1660 case, with a bobbin lace collar from the 1630s.
The garments include the Whatcombe
bodice (c1650-1660) (Figure 2) with interactive information on the project to “digitally
restore” the bodice. Research done for the reconstruction indicates that
the garment may originally have belonged to the first wife of Bussy Mansel (1623–1699), a Welsh parliamentarian
who served under Fairfax, and was appointed to the Barebones Parliament by
Cromwell in 1653.
Figure 3 -Detail of 1630s waistcoat |
The heavier embroidered patterns of the late 16th
and early 17th century, often with flowers but in this case mainly with bunches of grapes, that appear on the girl’s jacket
from c1610, contrast with the more open embroidery of a woman’s
waistcoat from c1630-40 that is displayed near it. A detail of the 1630s embroidery is shown in Figure 3. Slightly
later still is a 1670-1700
bodice, which repeats in an Indian painted cotton the very fanciful flower patterns that became popular for embroidery in the second half of the
century.
Figure 4 - Pocket detail 1685-95 coat |
In men’s wear there is a natural linen
doublet from around 1625-35, heavily embroidered in the same thread with
couching and French knots, and a heavily embroidered man's nightcap of about the same date, which is only one of several in the collection. There is a
wool/silk mix coat from about 1685-1695, which has 103 silk thread covered
buttons. Figure 4 shows the buttons on one of the pockets of the coat, and figure 5 below shows the splendid 1680s lace cravat displayed with it.
Figure 5 - 1680s cravat |
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