Paintings, Prints & Drawings — 1935-1941
Design for a wedding dress
Design for a Princess style wedding dress. It has a fitted long line bodice extending to the hips. V-shaped style lines across the bust are inverted along the hip line. The dress has a full skirt with a belt with buckle and close fitting long sleeves which extend beyond the wrist. It is worn with a long veil and head dress.
The paper is watermarked ‘ORIGINAL TURKEY MILL KENT’.
Fashion designer Victor Stiebel (1907-1976) was born in Durban in South Africa and came to Cambridge in 1924 to read architecture. After designing sets and costumes for the Footlights review, he decided to go into fashion design. Steibel started working for court dressmakers Reville in 1929. In 1932 he set up his own business at 21 Bruton Street in Mayfair. During World War II Stiebel enlisted in the Camouflage Division and also designed Utility clothing.
After the war, Stiebel worked for the Jacqmar fashion house in Grosvenor Street as Director of Couture, then in 1958 he re-opened his own establishment at 17 Cavendish Square. He retired in 1963 suffering from muscular sclerosis.
Stiebel produced romantic, understated clothes, specialising in evening wear and dressing high society figures and celebrities like Princess Margaret and Vivien Leigh.
- Category:
- Paintings, Prints & Drawings
- Object ID:
- 92.86/9
- Object name:
- Design for a wedding dress
- Object type:
- Artist/Maker:
- Stiebel, Victor
- Related people:
- —
- Related events:
- —
- Related places:
- —
- Production date:
- 1935-1941
- Material:
- paper, pencil
- Measurements/duration:
- H 414 mm, W 264 mm (paper)
- Part of:
- —
- On display:
- —
- Record quality:
- 100%
- Part of this object:
- —
- Credit:
- —
- Copyright holder:
- digital image © London Museum
- Image credit:
- —
- Creative commons usage:
- —
- License this image:
To license this image for commercial use, please contact the London Museum Picture Library.