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Eleanor Houghton, "Charlotte Brontë's Life in Clothes" (Bloomsbury 2026)

Apr 5, 2026
Eleanor Houghton, Brontë scholar, dress historian and illustrator, explores Charlotte Brontë through the 150 surviving garments she owned. She describes discovering the wardrobe, using drawing and scientific tests to date and analyze dresses, and how clothes illuminate sewing skill, literary scenes, provenance puzzles and the garments’ afterlives.
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INSIGHT

Drawing Reveals Garment Secrets

  • Houghton uses her own drawings to record seams, bones, and wear, forcing microscopic attention to detail.
  • Drawing preserved tactile and structural information lost in photographs and revealed 'secrets' in construction and wear.
ANECDOTE

The Thackeray Dress Reinterpreted

  • The so-called Thackeray dress was bright blue and heavily altered, then misread as improperly worn at a dinner with Thackeray.
  • Scientific fibre analysis and archival research showed Charlotte wore it to a private morning meeting with Thackeray in June 1850.
INSIGHT

Science Changes Perceptions Of Colour

  • Lab tests on two dresses revealed original dyes and colours, overturning assumptions about Charlotte's plainness.
  • The 'going away' dress once had a burgundy-purple hue, showing she wore more fashionable, vibrant colours than assumed.
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