In
Northanger Abbey, Miss Tilney wore a 'very pretty spotted muslin'. My latest feature in my ongoing series for
Jane Austen's Regency World (May/June issue) is on calico-printing. You will be able to find out more about the lives of child workers in the calico-printing industry in my forthcoming book,
Young Workers of the Industrial Age, to be published by
Pen & Sword this autumn.
Images from the author's collection:
Above: Morning Dress, Lady’s Monthly Museum, February 1801. Figure on the right is wearing a ‘printed cotton gown’ with a ‘stone-coloured pelisse, trimmed with fur. A white velvet bonnet, crossed with green velvet bands’.
Image right: Block printer and tierer or ‘tear girl’. Children as young as six worked for twelve hours or more helping block printers. Charles Knight’s Pictorial Gallery of Arts Vol. I, (c.1862).
Published on May 14, 2024 09:26