Vente 042322 Dressed to Kill, Dressed to Till
Par Casco Bay Auctions
23.4.22
147 Main Street, Freeport, ME, États-Unis
Historic Men’s Dress, Military and Civil, including Costume, Artwork, and Color Plate Books from the James L. Kochan Collection.
La vente est terminée

LOT 28:

Men’s Fashion Plates from Mahan’s Report for 1843. (2)

Vendu pour: $375
Prix de départ:
$ 250
Prix estimé :
$500 - $1 000
Commission de la maison de ventes: 20%
TVA: 5.5% Sur le prix complet du lot + la commission
Les utilisateurs venant de pays étrangers peuvent être exempts de payer des taxes, selon les réglementations de taxation correspondantes
23.4.22 à Casco Bay Auctions
tags:

Men’s Fashion Plates from Mahan’s Report for 1843. (2)
Two lithographs, each 19 x 23 5/8 inches.  By the 1840s, ambitious tailors in the United States were just making clothes, but marketing their expertise not only in tailoring, but as fashion forecasters.  They published not only tailoring manuals, but also periodicals, such as Philadelphia tailor Francis Mahan (c. 1790-1871), who published Mahan’s Protractor and Proof Systems of Garment Cutting, a semi-annual periodical that not only contained pattern diagrams and instruction for cutting, but also fold-out lithograph prints showing figures in the newest fashions, with short descriptive essays on the dress within the introduction to each issue.  These two, folding lithograph posters were enclosed, respectively, in Number 16: Spring and Summer Reports for 1843 and Number 17: Fall and Winter Reports for 1843 & 44.  Both were lithographed by Thomas Sinclair from original drawings by J. French. A tailor utilizing Mahan’s system or at least subscribing to his publication could then hang the most recent poster in their windows, showing that he had access to the most current fashion and cutting advice.  Photocopied keys to the illustrated figures, some of them celebrities of the era, accompany the original prints. The lithographs were originally issued folded, but that have been flattened by a paper conservator and edge splits have been mended with Japanese tissue.