Dublin Core
Title
New Pattern for Working a Pocket
Subject
women's clothing; accessory
Description
Pattern in the Lady's Magazine. Pattern in the Lady's Magazine. This pattern for a tie-on pocket is one of only two such designs to have been published in the magazine between 1770 and 1819. The scalloping is most likely designed to be stitched inside the the edge of the pocket rather than forming the edge. Tie-on pockets in this period were both decorative and functional items that featured a large front slit for the quick retrieval of items such as books, pins or keepsakes that a woman wanted to keep close to her person. Designs for reticules, which served similar functions, came to dominate needlework designs in the magazine post-1800. To learn more about eighteenth- and nineteenth-century women's pockets, I highly recommend Barbara Burman and Ariane Fennetaux brilliant book, The Pocket: A Hidden History of Women's Lives, 1660-1900, which was published by Yale University Press in 2019.
Creator
The Lady's Magazine (1770-1832)
Source
The Lady's Magazine, vol. 20 (1789)
Publisher
G. Robinson
Date
January 1789
Contributor
Jennie Batchelor
Rights
Bayerische Staatsbibliotek, per. 123 m-20
Format
paper pattern
Language
English
Type
paper embroidery pattern
Identifier
LM241