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- Photo Gallery -
Click Gallery One - Fourteen for photos
with lot numbers.
Click here
for Auction Listings Catalog with Prices
Realized.
.Click here
to print Prices Realized List.
At the age of 9, Tasha Tudor purchased her first article of
early 19th century clothing. Over the next seventy years,
this iconic American author & illustrator amassed a
comprehensive collection of American & European women's,
men's and children's historic clothing dating from the mid
18th through the mid 19th centuries.
Printed cotton day dresses from the 1830s were the focal
point of Tasha Tudor’s costume collecting. Her collection
documents the convergence of 1830s manufacturing technology
and fashion. Textile mills in England and the United States
were able to satisfy consumer demand for endless, varied &
fanciful printed cottons.
In 1996 Tasha Tudor
loaned her entire costume collection to Colonial
Williamsburg. Since that time, many garments from the
Tudor collection have complemented numerous exhibits at
Williamsburg’s DeWitt Wallace museum. Additionally, many of
these garments have been used as research & reference in
scholarly publications; i.e: Linda Baumgarten’s book What
Clothes Reveal, plates 95, 220 & 388 and Jane Gilliam &
Linda Baumgarten’s article, “19th Century
Children’s Costume in Tasha Tudor’s Collection” in the
magazine ANTIQUES, April 1998 issue. Selections from
the Tudor collection were gifted to Colonial Williamsburg
and are now part of their permanent costume archive.
The remaining garments, nearly 500 items,
will be offered in their entirety by the Charles A Whitaker
Auction Company as a single-owner sale on Sunday
November 11, 2007.
When displayed in our auction gallery on November 10th,
these items will represent the largest public exhibition of
early 19th century printed garments in our lifetimes.
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A
full-color book documenting this amazing collection
is now available for purchase, (click here). Ms Tudor has told us that these “costumes were ones
I use frequently in my artwork using a life size
figure to model the dresses from which I would
prepare sketches.
I even wore some of the
dresses.” |
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Tasha Tudor is now in her 91st year. Surrounded by her
beloved Corgis, gardens, antiques, & dolls, she has
illustrated nearly 100 books since publishing Pumpkin
Moonshine in 1938. She continues to live her life
dedicated to a rural 1830s sensibility. To learn more about
this American treasure, we suggest visiting the website run
by her family,
www.tashatudorandfamily.com.
This will be a once in a lifetime opportunity
to view, and possibly own, selections that have taken much
of the 20th century to assemble. Each lot will be sold with
two certificates of authenticity, a copy of a signed letter
from Tasha Tudor about her collection and a copy of Colonial
Williamsburg’s inventory data sheet.
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