Cotton Leavers Lace Ruffle & Tulle Boudoir Cap With Silk Ribbonwork

Cotton Leavers Lace Ruffle & Tulle Boudoir Cap With Silk Ribbonwork, c.1920s, UK. The Underpinnings Museum. Photography by Tigz Rice

Date: c.1920s

Origin: Great Britain

Fabric: Tulle

Brand: Custom made

 

This boudoir cap has a base of white cotton bobbinet tulle which has been elaborately decorated with ruffles of leavers lace trim and silk ribbon. The crown of the cap is made of a pale pink silk crêpe. The cap extends over the ears, with large rosettes made from silk ribbon, lace trim and ribbonwork flowers.

The boudoir cap is a type of lingerie headwear, most commonly worn during the nineteenth to early twentieth centuries. It was originally worn over undressed hair, worn in the privacy of the boudoir alongside nightwear. In the 1910s and 1920s, it would be commonly worn to protect shorter hair styles during sleep. As the designs became more and more elaborate towards the 1930s, it began to be considered more of a decorative hair net. Like other forms of lingerie, boudoir caps were usually made in fine fabrics such as lace, tulle and satin. Embellishment was often profuse, with techniques such as ribbonwork being particularly commonplace.

 

From the collection of Karolina Laskowska

Museum number: KL-2017-062

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