Friday, 30 November 2012

Weddings on my mind–Lucille Ball


It’s the last day of November, hard to believe I know, and only a few weeks until Christmas.  I personally try not to think about Christmas until after December 15, my wedding anniversary.  So as I am in a wedding frame of mind I thought I’d look at some other weddings of the past over the next few weeks.
Firstly, the wedding of Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz, who were married on this day in 1940, in Greenwich, Connecticut, eloping after a one day engagement period.

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The happy couple, 39 November 1940
 They had met earlier in the year while filming the Rodgers and Hart stage hit Too Many Girls.  She was a 28-year-old actress with a string of forgettable films, he, at 23, a dashing, Cuban-horn nightclub bandleader.  As Lucy said, “It wasn’t love at first sight. It took a full five minutes.” They did go out that first night, for dinner and dancing, and a few days later, co-star Eddie Bracken threw a beach party for those working on the picture.  After this they broke their engagements to their previous significant others.

Six months after their first meeting, on November 29th, 1940, Desi returned to New York with an idea in his mind and went to Lucy's hotel room, where she was busy giving a interview to a reporter entitled, "Why I Will Always be a Bachelor Girl.  They drove out to Greenwich, Connecticut the next morning, planning to get married at the Justice of the Peace's office.  The JP suggested a local country club , the Byram River Beagle Club, as something a little nicer .  Arnaz gave his age as 25; Miss Ball said she was 26. The bride wore a fur jacket and the ring was from Woolworth's –the only store open on a Saturday.

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It;s cold in Connecticut in November 

In ‘Love, Lucy’  Lucille ball gives this account of her wedding morning:
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Over the threshold
"After the short ceremony, we ate our wedding breakfast in front of a bright fire in the club's lounge. Outside, a fresh mantle of snow hung on the pine trees. After all the indecision we'd been through, Desi and I were dazed with happiness. We kissed each other and the marriage certificate again and again. It still has my lipstick marks on it.”


Afterwards they returned to the Roxy theatre in New York, where Desi was preforming and the first threshold he carried her over was that of his dressing room.

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When Desi went out on stage he brought along with him his new bride. Attendees were given little bags of rice, which were poured over the heads of the newlyweds, who embraced and blew kisses to the crowd.

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News of the wedding, 1 December 1940  source

Friends, family, and the country gave it six weeks (I know how that feels!)  Lucille’s Hollywood career blossomed and Desi toured America with his rumba band. Despite their clear love for each other, their marriage was not easy. Lucy had 3 miscarriages over several years and Desi had a wandering eye.   They filed for a divorce in 1944 but shortly after Ball obtained an interlocutory decree of divorce, she reconciled with Arnaz.

The couple had a second wedding on 19 June 19, 1949 at Our Lady of the Valley Church in Canoga Park, California, and both were in white.
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Weeding two, June 1949

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The kiss, June 1949  source

The on again off again union would last twenty years, spawn a television empire, two children, and arguably the best known television show of all time. They were finally divorced on May 4, 1960, just two months after filming the final episode of The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour. Regarding her divorce Lucy later said, “Desi was the great love of my life. I will miss him until the day I die. But I don’t regret divorcing him. I just couldn't take it anymore.”

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 News wire of the separation, 1960

Until his death in 1986, however, Arnaz and Ball remained friends and often spoke very fondly of each other.  It was said that Desi was Lucy's one true love.

Of course Lucille Ball also played a beautiful bride in many movies, in some lovely gowns.

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Modelling a gown in the 1930s, source

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In the Big Street, 1942 source

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 source

Funnily enough many people (and blogs and websites) have confused Lucy’s dress in the movie, The Long Long Trailer, with that of her wedding dress of 1940. For this 1953 movie Lucy and Ricky posed as newly-weds who buy a new trailer home (caravan) and spend a year travelling across the United States.

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Lucy tries on the dress in the long long trailer 1953, source

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Official movie portrait

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The long long trailer, source

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The long long trailer  source


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Magazine article from 1953, source

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and living in a trailer, 1953
Would you get married in a fur coat?

Deb xx

Thursday, 29 November 2012

Ten Vintage Seahorses..under $10


Just because I need something calming to look at today, some seahorses.  In fact ten vintage seahorses....for $10.

Natural history print on Etsy
Vintage 60s bottle opener, via Ebay

Vintage soaps and soapdish, via Etsy

Vintage Style Seahorse Crystal Brooch via Fantasyard 
vintage cast metal ashtray via ebay
Vintage Avon bottle, via etsy
vintage clip on earrings from Ruby lane

vintage swizzle stick via ebay

Vintage reverse painted pendant, via Yesterdays Jewels
Tiffany & Co. Men's Tie via ebay
Well, I love all of them. And I feel much calmer now. What about you?

Deb xxx


Wednesday, 28 November 2012

Ostrich Feathers in Fashion


Ostrich Hunt, Etched by Stefano della Bella c. 1654 source

Ostriches have been hunted and farmed for their feathers, skin, oil and meat since Roman times.  Ostrich feathers have been used in fashion for thousands of years and were at one time worth more than their weight in gold.

Golden Gate Ostrich Farm Certificate for 5 Shares of $10 each, issued 26th Nov 1912 source

Ostriches are native to the African continent but are farmed worldwide.  Ostriches are so adaptable that they can be farmed in climates ranging from South Africa to Alaska.  It is thought that ostriches were domesticated at Oudtshoorn- a town on the southern most tip of Africa, where Ostriches roamed the plains  for centuries.   The modern domestic ostrich was bred from a cross between South Africa's indigenous bird, the South African Black, and the Evans-Lovemore strain of Barbary blue-necked ostriches (141 of which were secretly smuggled out of North Africa and brought to Oudtshoorn by a group of adventurers), and farming began in about 1860.

A Poke Bonnet c. 1860, source


Silk dress with ostrich feather trim c. 1875 source

Ostrich feathers in ladies clothing and hats was the height of fashion in Victorian and Edwardian Europe where they were especially popular for use on the latest fashionable hats. 

American silk and wool hat with ostrich feathers c.1910 source


c. 1911, source


A headline inThe New York Times from 1912 read: OSTRICH FEATHERS ONCE MORE IN WIDE USE. The article explained: “For hat trimming one plume, full and long, is considered sufficient, and in almost every instance the tip of the plume is placed toward the back of the hat, or resting at the back of the head.”
Between 1875 and 1880, ostrich  prices reached up to £1000 per breeding pair, and farmers of the region, quickly realised that ostriches were far more profitable than any other activity. Numerous immigrants, particularly the Jews of Eastern Europe and Lithuania, moved to Oudtshoorn, so that it earned the nickname "Little Jerusalem" by 1890.  By 1900 there were over 700,000 birds in captivity world wide, including in Australia and new Zealand

"Ostrich farming in Auckland District. Young Birds inspecting visitors, Helvetia Park, Auckland," 1905, 

 The best plumes are from the male birds were carefully cut, with sharp scissor like tools, and used for women’s hats as well as  capes, hand fans, boas, muffs, and trimmings on a variety of clothing and accessories.  At the peak of their popularity during the “feather fashion craze” of the early 20th century, plumes were found in dozens of sizes, made into fantastic shapes and amazing types. 

Fan of mother of pearl & ostrich feathers c. 1900 source

Fan dancer c. 1910


a Russian singer with Feather boa, c. 1900

South African ostrich feather dusters were developed in Johannesburg, South Africa by missionary, broom factory manager, Harry S. Beckner in 1903. He felt that the Ostrich feathers made a convenient and most efficient tool for cleaning up the machines at the broom factory.  By 1905 the Ostrich Duster was the must have item in many a household and were sold in ever increasing numbers which saw the introduction of the  feather duster salesman!  

Ostriches were also valued for their leather, which meant that in the 18th century they were almost hunted to extinction.  It is claimed that ostriches produce the strongest commercial leather, and it is highly prized for its strength and beauty and is still used today for shoes, purses, wallets, luggage and other small accessories.

Cawston Ostrich Farm,  in South Pasadena, California , just 5km north of downtown Los Angeles,  was opened in 1886 by Edwin Cawston as  America's first ostrich farm, after he imported fifty ostriches from South Africa (although less than half survived the journey).  Ostrich farms soon became popular tourist destinations. Guests could feed the birds and could be taken for ostrich drawn carriage rides or ride on the birds back, and women could buy leather products and feather hats in the farm's shop.

Children in an ostrich pulled cart at the Cawston Ostrich Farm, South Pasadena c. 1925


A thrilling ride at Cawston's c. 1927 source

It was primarily the invention of the motor car and the advent of the First World War that brought the Ostrich Feather Boom Era to an end. Faster open vehicles played havoc with the ladies’ splendid feather decorated fashions and fashion trends in 1914 and onwards were generally more sober and less flamboyant.

The burst of the 'feather bubble' wreaked havoc on thousands of people, particularly, argues Sarah Abrevaya Stein in her  book Plumes: Ostrich Feathers, Jews, and a Lost World of Global Commerce,Jews, such as those of Oudtshoorn and their relatives elsewhere. 

Ostrich feathers did pop up now again after WWI, and examples in fahsion can be found from every decade.  Look at this stunning dress by Louiseboulanger, from 1928, with trim of individual filaments of ostrich plume knotted together to form longer strands, each dyed a different tone for the effect of an ombré cascade.


Dress by Louiseboulanger, c.1928 source

In about 1934 Chanel designed a gown and matching evening cape  in black silk crêpe and embellished with combed ostrich feathers, suitable for a 1930s dance hall or a private cocktail party perhaps.

Chanel, c. 1934 source


Ginger Rogers wore a similar ensemble in white in the musical  "Top Hat" with Fred Astaire in 1935.
  


Ostrich feather hats, with smaller feathers, were also popular in the 1940s.

American dinner hat, wool with purple ostrich feathers. c. 1942, source
And the fifites loved glamorous feather slippers!



The 1961 French film L'Année dernière à Marienbad (released in the USA as Last Year At Marienbad and in the UK as Last Year in Marienbad)  directed by Alain Resnais heavily featured ostrich feathers, in costumes designed by Chanel.

 Delphine Claire Beltiane Seyrig in  L'Année dernière à Marienbad, source

This dress is by the  House of Dior, designed by Marc Bohan (French, born 1926), c. 1965–68, in yellow silk, with black ostrich feathers, sequins and beads.

House of Dior c. 1960s, source 
Here's a stunning 1979 number by Bill Blass, silk with ostrich feathers.

Bill Blass, c1979 source
Vintage Ostrich feather Dress with paisley pattern, by James Galanos, c. 1980s source
Strangely enough, it is now the car industry that uses the most feathers.  According to BMW's Munich Factory in Germany, the most important part of a cars finish is the paint shop, the cleanest section of the factory.  The workers wear dust-free, lint-free overalls from head to toe, and to get the best finish each car's shell is dusted down by an amazing machine that gently strokes it all over with Ostrich feathers before painting.

There are still many uses for ostrich feathers in fashion around the world.  When I think 'feathers' the Rio Carnival springs to mind, as do Las Vegas showgirls with thier giant feather fans. Feather boas are still popular, and feather trimmings and plumes are still used as accessories in the millinery industry, and on ladies evening gowns. Here is a lovely ensemble from Oscar de la Renta's winter collection 2004/2005, with a subtle ostrich feather hemline.


Oscar de la Renta 2004/5 source

Hilary Swank's Gucci gown at the 2011 Oscars is a lovely example of elegant ostrich feathers.


 And subtle feather use on this cute modern fascinator.


Of course there are always traditional feather fashion, such as the Order of the Thistle with their black velvet hat  trimmed with white ostrich feathers and a black egret or heron feather.


Prince William, Earl of Strathearn, after becoming a Knight of the most ancient and most noble Order of the Thistle
 source

Do you like feathers?

Deb xx