18thVirginia
Major
- Joined
- Sep 8, 2012


I'd be interested to know how some of these colors were made. Most colors today are synthetic, and earlier vegetable dye processes have been abandoned. Although synthetic dyes (notably mauve) existed by the time of the Civil War, the transition was still ongoing.These colors are incredible! The blues and purples- seriously, we just do not see them around today! I've noticed when you do, in a shirt or sweater, even a sweatshirt these are the first colors to sell out. Still, the subtle colors shown here do not exist save maybe genuinely high end products. I'm a huge fan of ' color' but feel manufacturers interpret ' color' to exist in either garish spectrums or monotone or muted. 150 years ago they really knew how to delight us, didn't they? Makes you smile just thinking of wearing some of these, might make dealing with a hoop worth it.![]()
What I love about this dress is that you can almost hear the thoughts of the lady who fell in love with this fabric trying to get it to match up on the skirt she wanted!
I'd be interested to know how some of these colors were made. Most colors today are synthetic, and earlier vegetable dye processes have been abandoned. Although synthetic dyes (notably mauve) existed by the time of the Civil War, the transition was still ongoing.
OOOHHHHHHH! That is sooo pretty! Thanks for posting!