Finally, the fifth and most recent dress I have made! This one is also based on the Folkwear Regency Gown pattern, but with a lot of help from Janet Arnold’s Patterns of Fashion I, specifically the dress from Salisbury Museum, circa 1798-1805. {Edit: I was delighted to find an historic dress with the same type of built-in stays on the wonderful web-site of the Nationalmuseet, Denmark. Here is their time line section.}


The fabric is rayon brocade with a small diamond pattern. Seed pearls are sewn at the neckline and ‘waist’ to the grosgrain ribbon used. The little rosette on the hanger is a hair ornament. I used the Folkwear bodice and skirt with the following modifications:
1. Back and side neckline: added 3/4 inch to neckline of back and side fronts.
2. Back bodice: remove enough at the back fold to make the bodice form-fitting, and shape with a dart which is larger at the bottom seam and finishes about 2 inches from the neckline.
3. Stays: added front under bodice (estimated depth measurement from 1″ below underbust line to just above nipple, and then corrected with fitting adding darts) to the sides of front bodice side pieces, so as to make a small stays attached to the dress. Linen lines the bodice and forms a double layer for the stays. There are 5 bones in each side. It would be good to line the whole thing with interfacing, depending on the firmness of the outer fabric. I expect this would suit A to B cups only, and the Mantua Maker’s Regency stays would be more appropriate for larger busts. In that case the dress could be made with plain underbust flaps as in Janet Arnold’s pattern.

attached stays before eyelets added.
4. Skirt: added plackets to both sides of front skirt piece. They foldback to meet the front edge of the side skirt pieces where the same amount of fabric was added. There was some extra fabric which I gathered just infront of the placket. The ribbon underbust is sewn to the skirt front from the placket edge across the front so that the long ends reach around and tie in the front below the bust and under the drop front. For my size (large), the (folded) front edge of the front skirt piece is 1 1/2 inches beyond the edge of the drop front.
5. Drop front: the regular Folkwear front bodice is gathered on the top with two ribbons in a casing sewn so that there is a small ruffle once the ribbon is pulled up and tied inside (easier fit over the bust); and at the bottom, by gathering to the measurement on the pattern, and sewing to the ribbon that binds the skirt. The second ribbon is added to the back to face the under bust band. Button loops were made from folded ribbon and attached with a ribbon facing to the sides of the drop front, to be buttoned with pearl buttons on the side fronts.
6. Sleeves: I added one inch to the length and as much to the width as the 45″ wide fabric would allow. They were made with the larger Folkwear sleeve pattern.

The dress is put on by first fastening up the stays, then wrapping the under bust ribbons around the body (through the belt loops on the back) and tieing at the front under the bust. Then the drop front is buttoned up to the side front pieces.

