Sorting by

×

body snatchers

Mrs. Bean

A humble milliner in 1806, Mrs. Bean rose to giddy heights in just a decade, building a clientele of blue-bloods. In 1816, working with another leading modiste, Mrs. Triaud, she created twenty-six dresses and pelisses for Princess Charlotte's wedding trousseau, some of which still survive today in museums. Mrs. Charlotte Bean  nee Kennedy (ca.1785-1868) approx. 1806-08:  Bean's Millinary Rooms                     42 Oxford St. approx. 1809-18:   Mrs Bean's Magazin des Modes      32 Albemarle St. Born Charlotte Kennedy, the daughter of haberdasher John Kennedy, Mrs. Bean was married very young to her husband Thomas in 1803, and almost [...]

By |August 12th, 2020|Categories: Modistes|Tags: , , , , |

Other Interesting Posts

Outsiders Within – Romani in the Regency

By the time 'Gypsies' appeared on the pages of Jane Austen, Sir Walter Scott and Maria Edgeworth, Romani people had been in England for centuries. Sidebar: Believing the copper-skinned migrants to hail from Egypt, the Europeans had coined the term "Gypsies" for these migrants. Some consider [...]

Go to Top