Pret-a-Papier
Jul. 23rd, 2012 10:55 amOriginally posted by
glvalentine at Pret-a-Papier
This weekend, I went home for a family visit, where we trundled out to DC for the Isabelle de Borchgrave exhibit at the Hillwood Museum in DC. The gardens are lovely, the house is impressive, but I think we can all agree we know why I was there:

Isabelle de Borchgrave makes dresses out of paper. And that sounds like a paper-doll thing, or a whimsical thing, until you start to examine her work and realize the thousands of hours of details put into the construction, and that as well as hand-painting the designs, she paints the fabric to imitate the play of light and shadow across the actual dress – before the dress is constructed. (There's a little demo at the entrance to the exhibit outlining a seven-stop process, where Step 1 is "crumble and iron the fabric repeatedly until desired fabric drape is achieved," which I would have counted as closer to twenty steps, but that's just me.)
It was lovely.
( A photo-heavy round-up, cut for your scrolling convenience! )

Isabelle de Borchgrave makes dresses out of paper. And that sounds like a paper-doll thing, or a whimsical thing, until you start to examine her work and realize the thousands of hours of details put into the construction, and that as well as hand-painting the designs, she paints the fabric to imitate the play of light and shadow across the actual dress – before the dress is constructed. (There's a little demo at the entrance to the exhibit outlining a seven-stop process, where Step 1 is "crumble and iron the fabric repeatedly until desired fabric drape is achieved," which I would have counted as closer to twenty steps, but that's just me.)
It was lovely.
( A photo-heavy round-up, cut for your scrolling convenience! )