×


 x 

Shopping cart
Lady Colin Campbell - The Lady's Dressing Room 1892: The woman's sanctum, care of the body, advice and recipes, guidance for the obese and the thin little hints and twenty one pages of advertisements - 9781873590621 - 9781873590621
Stock image for illustration purposes only - book cover, edition or condition may vary.

The Lady's Dressing Room 1892: The woman's sanctum, care of the body, advice and recipes, guidance for the obese and the thin little hints and twenty one pages of advertisements

€ 13.07
FREE Delivery in Ireland
Description for The Lady's Dressing Room 1892: The woman's sanctum, care of the body, advice and recipes, guidance for the obese and the thin little hints and twenty one pages of advertisements Hardcover. New.
"The Lady's Dressing-Room" was the indispensable companion of every 'well-bred woman' and 'great lady' at the close of the nineteenth century. In chapters on each part of the female form, as well as everything one might wish to adorn it with, copious details guide the reader through such imperfections as wrinkles, sunburn, warts and even baldness - for which a concoction of rum and onion is prescribed - without ever venturing upon too much scientific explanation. Such simple and politely euphemistic terminology as 'small black spots' and 'redness', combined with the occasional piece of hearsay or high society gossip, gives the impression of a casual yet authoritative chat among nineteenth century aristocratic 'gentlewomen'. Ever fearful of old age or indeed the illusion thereof, "The Lady's Dressing-Room" strikes a graceful balance between hopeless self-indulgence - chocolate is offered as a cure for bad breath - and an heroic call for 'spartan frugality' where there is even the slightest 'tendency to grow stout'. As well as being highly informative on its intended subject, this book also divulges a great deal about the writer's contemporary society. Numerous pages of advertisements for everything from a carpet sweeper 'the greatest labour saving invention of the century - Invention hath no nobler aim than to lighten woman's labour'; new patent invisible boot and shoe elevators - without fear of detection in either sex and the permanent removal of superfluous vein-marks, moles or warts through the administering of electricity by a lady electrician, demonstrate a burgeoning consumerism (not to mention Victorian eccentricity). While assertions such as that we 'are in so many ways above Orientals' highlight the matter-of-fact feeling of Western superiority prevalent at the time. Nothing was more important to a lady than to be seen to be a lady. This is the book that showed them how.

Product Details

Publisher
Old House
Number of pages
384
Format
Hardback
Publication date
2006
Condition
New
Number of Pages
384
Place of Publication
London, United Kingdom
ISBN
9781873590621
SKU
9781873590621
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 2 to 4 working days
Ref
99-1

Reviews for The Lady's Dressing Room 1892: The woman's sanctum, care of the body, advice and recipes, guidance for the obese and the thin little hints and twenty one pages of advertisements

Goodreads reviews for The Lady's Dressing Room 1892: The woman's sanctum, care of the body, advice and recipes, guidance for the obese and the thin little hints and twenty one pages of advertisements


Subscribe to our newsletter

News on special offers, signed editions & more!