A close-bodied gown, English nightgown, or robe à l'anglaise was a women's fashion of the 18th century. Like the earlier
mantua, from which it evolved,[1] the back of the gown featured
pleats from the shoulder, stitched down to mould the gown closely to the body until the fullness was released into the skirt.
Through the 1770s, the back pleats became narrower and closer to the center back, and by the 1780s these pleats had mostly disappeared and the skirt and bodice were cut separately.[2][3]
The gown was open in front, to reveal a matching or contrasting
petticoat, and featured elbow-length sleeves, which were finished with separate
frills called
engageantes.
Gallery
Robe à l'anglaise, cotton embroidered in wool, shown with an embroidered kerchief, England, 1780s. LACMA, M.59.25a-c
Robe a l'anglaise. Front view of dress in previous image.
Robe a l'anglaise with matching petticoat, French, 1784–87, Cotton, metal, and silk.
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 1991.204a, b
Side view of the robe a l'anglaise at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Freshman, Philip, Dorothy J. Schuler, and Barbara Einzig, eds (1983). An Elegant Art: Fashion & Fantasy in the Eighteenth Century, Abrams/Los Angeles County Museum of Art,
ISBN0-87587-111-9
Takeda, Sharon Sadako, and Kaye Durland Spilker (2010). Fashioning Fashion: European Dress in Detail, 1700 - 1915, LACMA/Prestel USA,
ISBN978-3-7913-5062-2
Waugh, Norah, The Cut of Women's Clothes: 1600-1930, New York, Routledge, 1968,
ISBN0-87830-026-0