Elsa Schiaparelli’s Skeleton Dress
Quoted from Victoria and Albert Museum‘s website:
To many contemporaries the sinister black skeleton evening dress with its padded representations of human bones was an outrage – an offence against good taste. Although otherwise in elegant harmony with the prevailing lines of late 1930s evening wear, the skeleton dress is so constricted that it became a second skin and the imitation anatomy sat defiantly proud of the fine matt silk surface. Schiaparelli exaggerated the usually delicate trapunto quilting technique to make enormous ‘bones’ – the design was stitched in outline through two layers of fabric, then cotton wadding inserted through the back to bring the design into relief on the front. The shoulder seams and right side are closed by bold plastic zips.
In 1938 Elsa Schiaparelli unveiled the The Skeleton Dress for The Circus Collection, a collaboration with surrealist painter Salvador Dalí. Read the intriguing biography on Wikipedia.
Tags: Elsa Schiaparelli, fashion, Salvador Dalì, Skeleton Dress