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Washington showcases US first ladies gown

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image ‘The First Ladies’ exhibition features 26 dresses, and more than 160 other objects, including portraits, White House china, personal possessions and related objects

The dress worn in 1933 by Eleanor Roosevelt during her husband’s inauguration ball was slate-blue crepe. Michelle Obama chose a white silk chiffon gown. Both outfits are now on public display.
The Museum of American History this weekend opened an exhibition of 26 dresses and over 160 artifacts including portraits and silverware that belonged to US first ladies that will refresh a longstanding section of the museum.
The highlight, however, is the inaugural ballgowns, such as a strapless lace number worn by Julia Grant (wife of Ulysses Grant) in 1869, the all burgundy velvet chosen by Caroline Harrison (wife of Benjamin Harrison) in 1889, and the white satin and lace of Nancy Reagan in 1981.
“It’s their debut, this is the dress of record, and the one which stays in people’s memory,” Lisa Kathleen Graddy, the exhibit’s curator, told AFP, noting that for a century it has been custom for the dresses to enter the museum.
The first lady is “on the public stage all time and want to look appropriate because they are representing the nation,” she added.
The term “first lady” is not official – the first presidential spouse was known as “Lady Washington” and the term did not come into use until Dolly Madison, wife of James Madison, was buried in 1849.
For the inaugural ball, first ladies got a chance to make their statement through their dresses, according to Graddy.

The dresses of former First Ladies are displayed in a major new exhibition showcasing the premier objects from the century-old First Ladies Collection

Lady Bird Johnson wanted hers to be made out of a fabric “that could stand the test of time,” and the resulting yellow satin dress and matching coat was “very beautiful, but very simple,” said Graddy.
Also on display is Barbara Bush’s blue velvet and satin dress from the inauguration ball in 1989 and the violet lace chosen by Hillary Clinton four years later.
But the display includes other dresses, such as the pale yellow silk evening gown that Jackie Kennedy wore in 1961 to the first state dinner hosted by JFK.
The ball gowns were also used to serve the nation. Lou Hoover (Herbert Hoover’s wife), renowned for her elegance was the first president’s wife to be pictured in Vogue, and in 1929 she wore a cotton evening dress to promote the US textiles industry.
But not every first lady was as patriotic when it came to fashion.
Frances Cleveland (wife of Grover Cleveland) in 1895 bought a Jacques Doucet dress in Paris, while Edith Wilson (Woodrow Wilson’s spouse) in the 1920s favored black robes from Worth, another French fashion house.

A dress and other accessories of US First Lady Michelle Obama is displayed at the Smithsoniani’s National Museum of American History in Washington, DC, on November 18

“It’s a changing thing. Each first lady recreates the job to suit the president, to suit the needs of the country,” said Graddy.
“But there is also a constant,” she added. “The first lady is a hostess and a representative of the nation at home and abroad, of her husband’s administration.”
The Jimmy Choo shoes worn by Michelle Obama at the event are on display in the new first ladies’ exhibit as well as her jewelry and gown.
The ensemble worn by the current first lady included earrings with a center cluster of briolettes, set in white gold, with a total carat weight of 61.

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