Wednesday, March 11, 2009

S/S 1949, Mille-fleurs










S/S 1949-by Christian Dior

Mille-fleurs
print.
colors included:
1.white
2.Ornamental Grasses
- Yellow-green
3.Lavender- Pale tint of violet
4.Laura Bush Petunias- Violet ( red+blue )

Split Complementary Color Scheme

Mille-fleurs (French) literally means "thousand flowers" and refers to a background made of many small flowers and plants. It was an especially popular motif in the applied arts and crafts during the Middle Ages in Europe.

Mille-fleurs style is frequently seen in 15th century French and 16th century Low Countries tapestry. For an example, see The Lady and the Unicorn and The Hunt of the Unicorn

*Symbolic meaning of Lavender is devotion, love, fashion, floral, femininity, refinement, grace, delicate beauty

*Symbolic meaning of violet

Violet

A combination of red and blue, colors that display diametrically opposed personalities, violet and other hues in its family, such as mauve and purple, variously wrap themselves in cloaks of mystery, richness, refinement, malaise, trouble or provocation. The violet family suffers from a split personality that has always generated very different reactions.

The history of dyes has been marked by purple, a crimson substance extracted from some species of mollusks and used, in days of yore, to color the ornate garments worn by emperors ( royalty ). Hence the expression purple prose used to describe ornate writing.

The religious world associates violet with the Passion of Christ. Easter rites include the use of complementary colors - violet and yellow - symbolic of lent and the return of spring with its yellow crocuses and daffodils

In the days of the British Empire, mauve was the only color allowed to complement gray, black and white during periods of half-mourning. The gloomy connotations attached to the color may well explain the aversion of fashion designers for mauve until the middle of the nineteenth century.

During the sixties, the violet family of colors became very popular. Considered unconventional and provocative, colors in the violet range stood as the symbol of a generation of youths in search of freedom. Some still recall those vivid prints in oranges and magenta!

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