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Dolly Varden (costume)

Type of women's costume

Dolly Varden (costume)

Type of women's costume

Music sheet cover depicting women wearing Dolly Varden costumes.

A Dolly Varden, in this sense, is a woman's outfit fashionable from about 1869 to 1875 in Britain and the United States. It is named after a character in Charles Dickens, and the items of clothing referred to are usually a hat or dress.

Name

Dolly Varden is a character from Charles Dickens's 1841 historical novel Barnaby Rudge set in 1780. The Dolly Varden costume was an 1870s version of fashions of the 1770s and 1780s.

Fashion

The term "Dolly Varden" in dress is generally understood to mean a brightly patterned, usually flowered, dress with a polonaise overskirt gathered up and draped over a separate underskirt. The overdress is typically made from printed cotton or chintz, although it can be made from other materials such as lightweight wool, silk and muslin. An 1869 fashion doll in the collection of the V&A Museum of Childhood is dressed in the Dolly Varden mode; unusually the outfit is in dark colours. The Gallery of Costume in Manchester holds a more typical Dolly Varden dress in its collections, made of white linen with a pink and mauve flowered print.

A Dolly Varden hat, as it relates to the dress, is usually understood to mean a flat straw hat trimmed with flowers and ribbons, very like the 18th-century bergère hat. It is also closely related to the Pamela hat or "gipsy hat" that was popular during the earlier part of the century.

Although the typical Dolly Varden fashion of the large overskirt and polonaise died out with changes in fashion at the turn of the century, the names continued to be associated with chintz patterned fabrics and peplum style dresses. Even in the late 1930s, chintz patterned fashions might still have the name 'Dolly Varden' attached to them.

References

Notes

References

  1. The Ladies' Treasury. (2005). "Fashion in the 1870s and '80s".
  2. [https://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O1131692/doll-fashion-doll/ 1869 Fashion doll wearing Dolly Varden costume] in the collection of the V&A Museum of Childhood. Retrieved 6 February 2010
  3. (February 2024)
  4. (1937). "English women's clothing in the nineteenth century". Dover Publications.
  5. "Scans of two 1872 Dolly Varden themed music sheets".
  6. Levey, W. C. [http://nla.gov.au/nla.mus-vn1182099 The Dolly Varden (polka music) composed by W. C. Levey] Retrieved 6 February 2010
  7. Bardsley, Charles W.. (1880). "Curiosities of Puritan Nomenclature". Chatto and Windus.
  8. "Dolly Varden".
  9. Moyle, Peter B.. (1977). "Inland Fishes of California". University of California Press.
  10. Voss, Gilbert L.. (2002). "Seashore Life of Florida and the Caribbean". [[Courier Dover Publications]].
  11. Cedro, Carmel. (7 June 2012). "Dolly Varden: Sweet inspiration". Australasian Journal of Popular Culture.
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