If you have been following my posts I mention re-purposing or combining various pieces of patterns or textiles to get the finished result I am looking for. I was browsing for ideas for my blog today and I came across someone else's blog and it immediately brought back childhood memories and perhaps the inspiration for my sewing projects.
I don't exactly remember if I got the Fashion Plates toy as a birthday present or Christmas present but nonetheless it was a present I used for a very long time.
I must have been around 10 when these plates came out on the market but I do remember "playing" with them through my high school years. If you are not familiar with this toy; it comes with several different sized plates of different pieces of one outfit, a set of colored pencils and a frame and onion paper.
After you choose your plates to make your outfit you lay them in the frame, cover with the paper secure the top frame over the plates and use the pencils to color in the design. I made some of the craziest outfits with this toy. I think it would still be cool to have one of these around.
Fashion plates are not a modern means of clothing design. They were used a lot in the late 1900's and early 20th century as pictures in magazines, catalogs and advertising to depict the current fashion to the public. The pictures were not rudimentary but they did have a generic look. They were also used a lot in book illustrating. From my research, before fashion plate illustrations were available to show off the current trend; the outfits were sewn, completed with the desired colors and trim and offered on dolls called berlines. It is said that this is how Marie Antoinette chose her various gowns.
(example fashion plate illustration c1900)