Edwardian street style: Astonishing amateur images which capture the
fashion of women in London and Paris over a century ago

By Mail On Sunday Reporter

 *PUBLISHED:* 18:49 GMT, 15 July 2012 | *UPDATED:* 07:49 GMT, 16 July 2012

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Street blogging may be considered to be a modern phenomenon, but a series
of images unearthed by Kensington and Chelsea Libraries prove that the
practice may date as far back as the early 1900’s.

The Library service has published several wonderful images by the late
amateur photographer Edward Linley Sambourne, who was also the chief
cartoonist for Punch, which give an amazing insight into the street style
of the woman of London and Paris over a century ago.

Sambourne’s beautiful street photography captures the casual side of
Edwardian fashion in a manner which is rarely seen
 [image: London, Cromwell Road, 12th July 1905]

 [image: London, Church Street, 8th September 1906]

Taking a stroll: A young woman pictured in Cromwell Road, London on July
12th 1905 in a stylish white shirt with a belt and an ankle-length skirt
(left) while another woman, who Sambourne describes as a 'shopgirl' walks
along Kensington Church Street, on September 8th 1906
 [image: London, Kensington, 8th September 1906]

 [image: London, 15th June 1908]

 [image: London, 30th June 1908]

Time warp: A female cyclist fiddles with her hat in Kensington on September
8th 1906, a formally dressed woman in a white dress and a black handbag
walks along the street on June 15th 1908 and a woman wearing a similar
outfit strolls while engrossed in a book on June 30th 1908

In one image, which was taken in Cromwell Road , South Kensington in July
1906, a woman looks in the direction of the camera as she strolls along the
street, dressed in an ankle length plaid skirt, matching jacket and a
sophisticated hat.

In fact hats seems to be the most popular accessory of the woman pictured ,
and there is an eclectic mix of straw hats,  church hats and veiled hats
amongst all of the photographs.

However there is a distinct lack of handbags, with less than half of the
unnamed subjects opting to carry what has now become a major staple of
modern fashion.

In another image, a woman is seen walking along the pavement in Kensington
guiding a cycle with one arm and rearranging her enormous hat with the
other.

   [image: London, Kensington, 4th July 1906]

 [image: London, Cromwell Road, 1906]

Two by two: Sambourne captures women holding books in Kensington on July
4th 1906 and a two friends walking together on July 4th 1906
  [image: London, Cornwall Gardens, 20th February 1906]

 [image: London, Cromwell Road, 1906]

Back to black: A woman looks in the direction of the camera as she strolls
along the street, dressed in an ankle length plaid skirt, matching jacket
and a sophisticated hat in Cornwall Gardens on February 20th 1906, while a
second woman, also dressed in a dark outfit takes a walk on the same day

 But perhaps the most modern image is of a young woman, who Sambourne
describes as a ‘shop girl’, strolling down Kensington Church Street
completely engrossed in a book.

Perhaps unsurprisingly the women of Paris are dressed slightly more
stylishly than the Londoners with parasols being a common fixture.

While corsets and long, fitted dresses are undoubtedly the style of choice,
there are also some shorter, below the knee styles on display.
[image: Paris, 3rd June 1906]

 [image: Paris, Tuileries Gardens, 4th June 1906]

 [image: Paris, Place du Louvres, 4th June 1906]

 Parisian chic: These images were taken during Sambourne’s trip to the
French capital in 1906 and show women, men and young children out and about
 [image: Paris, Helene du Bois, 4th June 1906]

 [image: Paris, Helene du Bois, 4th June 1906]
[image: Paris, 5th June 1906]

Stylish: Sambourne's friend Helen du Bois is pictured playing handball in a
formal dress on June 4th 1906 (far left and middle) and a stylish woman
walks up a concrete staircase in Paris on the following day

The Parisian images were taken during Sambourne’s trip to the French
capital in 1906.

The cartoonist took up photography as an aid to his art and took many
fascinating images of Victorian/Edwardian society.

His wife Marion wrote in her diary that photography had become as much an
obsession as a hobby.

   [image: Paris, 4th June 1906]

 [image: Paris, Rue des Rivoli, 5th June 1906]
[image: Paris, Champs-Élysées, 3rd June 1906]

  Eclectic style: Two women, who are most likely in mourning, dressed in
black lace (left), another pair of women lead a young girl down a staircase
in Rue des Rivoli and a group of women holding parasols and wearing
eyecatching hats walk along the Champs-Élysées

 [image: Paris, Boulevard des Italiens, 5th June 1906]
[image: Paris, Steps to Rue de Rivoli, 3rd June 1906]

 [image: Paris, 3rd June 1906]


 Street style:  A couple walk along the Boulevard des Italien on June 5th
1906 (left), a group of women walk up the steps of the Rue de Rivoli on
June 3rd 1906 and two well-dressed women stand in the streets of the French
capital on the same day





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