Wednesday, 20 January 2016

The Itch Exposed: Special Report for Admirers of Regency and Georgian Fashion

Those of a delicate disposition look away now, because today Suzan Lauder visits the salon to discuss the intimate matter of bottom scratching!


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The Itch Exposed: Special Report for Admirers of Regency and Georgian Fashion
By Suzan Lauder, Author of Alias Thomas Bennet

Madame Gilflurt and I share a fixation with anything Regency, including the bizarre. My recent focus on Regency costuming has led me down peculiar paths. Readers may have enjoyed the Thrift Shop Regency Costume Experiment, a 30-episode blog series about upcycling and modifying used, budget, vintage, discount, and found items into Regency gowns, reticules, bonnets, tailcoats, walking sticks—the works! The ups and downs of my experience were shared with humour, and I posted patterns for some of my original designs, too!

1803 from La Miroir de la Mode

While I call it research, far too much of my time is spent perusing Pinterest for museum pieces, fashion magazine drawings, and original artwork of the Regency period. On one occasion I was searching for a specific type of gown and noticed the image you see above (from Mirior de la Mode, 1803). This Georgian-era costume is interesting—I love the feathers—but it was not quite the example suited to my blog post.

Even so, I kept returning to review the drawing because I was struck by an unexpected impression: it appeared as if she was scratching her bum! The image was saved and filed, and each time I noticed it, I had a giggle. Of course, she’s really holding up the train of her gown, but knowing that tidbit did not one jot of harm to my ability to see it otherwise.

As if my fascination willed it to happen, other similar examples appeared! I began collecting images of bum-scratching ladies, most of which were displayed in Costume Parisian between 1801 and 1809, the Georgian years that immediately preceded the Regency era proper (1811-1820). The numbers in parenthesis are the year of the fashion plate. Click on the thumbnails to see larger images.


The Itch Exposed #1

The Itch Exposed #2

The Itch Exposed #3

The Itch Exposed #4

The Itch Exposed #5

Five ladies can be considered bona fide bum-scratching fashion magazine art: Costume Parisien drawing numbers 335 (1802), 478 (1803), 602 (1805), and 615 (1805), as well as the lady on the left from the pair of ladies, #3, in yellow (1802). 


Two ladies seen from the front are probably scratching their bums. They are John Hoppner’s painting of Mrs. Dottin from 1803-04 and the 1809 fashion plate with the unusual olive green short-sleeved spencer.

The Itch Exposed #6

The Itch Exposed #7

The Itch Exposed #8

The Itch Exposed #9

The Itch Exposed #10

Three Regency ladies above are sneaking their hand back to scratch their bum! The guilty parties  include Costume Parisien plates 275 (1801) and 1157 (1811), as well as the 1811 La Belle AssemblĂ©e evening dress with the Van Dyke edged overskirt and unique light blue back draping.

The Itch Exposed #11

The Itch Exposed #12

Two others (Costume Parisien numbers 248 (1801) and 660 (1805)) have each clutched such a great twisted knot of silk, I conclude they want to ensure no one can accuse them of bum scratching.

The so-called professional costumers may roll their eyes at me once again, but one must have a sense of humour in life!

About the Author

Suzan Lauder fell in love with Jane Austen because of Austen’s snarky comments on people who diss novelists in Northanger Abbey, the first Austen book Lauder read. This passion for Austen’s work was brought to the like-minded Jane Austen Fan Fiction community, where Lauder has been active as a reader, writer, collaborator, researcher, beta editor, and mentor of new authors for over six years. 

Her Austen-inspired Regency romance novel with a mystery twist, Alias Thomas Bennet, was published by Meryton Press in 2013, and she’s joined MP again with a short story called Delivery Boy in the award-winning holiday romance anthology, Then Comes Winter, released in fall 2015. Her latest Austen-inspired Regency romance novel, Letter from Ramsgate, is currently being serially posted on JAFF mega-site A Happy Assembly prior to publishing. 

Lauder blogs at road trips with the redhead and the Thrift Shop Regency Costume Experiment, and creates her own original Regency-styled gowns and accessories. She and her husband of thirty years bought a little 19th century casita in Mexico for their two rescue cats, and hang out there for three months of the winter. The balance of the year, they live on beautiful Vancouver Island, BC, Canada.


Written content of this post copyright © Suzan Lauder, 2016.

10 comments:

Vallypee said...

A fun post indeed, but how odd that so many of the plates show the same action! :)

Carol Hedges said...

Love this!!! what a wry observation..and now I'm seeing it too!

Charlotte Frost said...

An unforgettable reminder to re-examine sources and not jump to conclusions. Thank you :-)
Charlotte

Demetrius said...

In floor length gowns when out of doors and sometimes in there would often be the need to lift the full gown clear of the ground, so commonly ladies would need to raise the full gown yet be able to move the feet easily. I suspect that much the best way of doing this would be to sweep the gown up from towards or at the rear.

Sheila L. Majczan said...

Now that you planted that image in my mind I will never look at paintings like this again in the same fashion. Hilarious!

Sheila L. Majczan said...

Now that you planted that image in my mind I will never look at paintings like this again in the same fashion. Hilarious!

Sarah said...

is the lady in greyed lavender goosing the lady in yellow who is scratching her bum?

Mark said...

There is something special about the outfits of the era...and how later generations were "scandalized" by them. Great post:)

Catherine Curzon said...

Thank you all for your comments and Suzan for this fantastically cheeky post!

Kelly M. said...

Fascinating post! I loved the photos, and I wish I had the talent and patience to create my own dresses! Thank you, Suzan!