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Gift of the Lyman Allyn Museum, New London, 1959.54.2  Photograph by Gavin Ashworth.  © 2009 Th…
Quilted Petticoat
Gift of the Lyman Allyn Museum, New London, 1959.54.2 Photograph by Gavin Ashworth. © 2009 The Connecticut Historical Society.
Photographs and all rights purchased by the Connecticut Historical Society.

Quilted Petticoat

Original Owner (American, 1741 - 1828)
Clothing Maker
Date1758
MediumHand-quilted with silk thread; satin-woven worsted face, wool batting, wool lining
DimensionsPrimary Dimensions (length): 39 1/2in. (100.3cm)
Hem (circumference): 116in. (294.6cm)
ClassificationsCostume
Credit LineGift of the Lyman Allyn Museum, New London
DescriptionRed satin-woven worsted petticoat, quilted in cream-colored and golden brown silk threads with various designs extending ten inches above the hem; above this, the quilted pattern is a trellis-like design, stitched in groups of three lines. Above the scallops, the body of the petticoat is quilted in a diamond pattern, with triple rows of stitching creating the diamonds. The quilting ends four inches below the waistband, and there is no wadding in this area.

The decorative band around the hem includes figures of a mermaid, lion, a griffin or leopard, a fish, 2 stags, 3 rabbits, 3 different birds, and a dog(?). The lion has the initials "SH" stitched on his rump; the griffin or leopard has the date "1758" stitched on his body. The mermaid holds a comb and a mirror. The figures are interspersed between nine plant slips, each with three branches bearing different, oversize flowers. These designs are surrounded by closely-worked parallel diagonal lines. The stitching is a variant of the back stitch, worked extremely finely.

The petticoat is interlined with undyed wool wadding and backed by an undyed, plain-woven wool, possibly homespun. The hem is finished in a knife edge. The petticoat is gathered onto a replaced waistband of red cotton fabric (the original, perhaps on a drawstring, may be underneath the newer material). There is an eleven-inch opening along one seam, but there is no evidence that the petticoat ever had pocket slits. The backing fabric is pieced in one place, raw edge to raw edge, down the length of the petticoat; this appears to be original, as the quilting continues uninterrupted over it. The face fabric is seamed along this same line. The backing fabric is properly seamed near this odd piecing--perhaps the maker miscalculated the required width of the backing(?).
Object number1959.54.2
On View
Not on view
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