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regency and georgian are they the same period?

41 replies

twinsetandpearls · 21/08/2008 15:43

Thanks am putting a costume togther for dd and am getting confused I am referring to the early 18th century.

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Habbibu · 21/08/2008 15:44

Kind of - here's wiki: The Georgian era is a period of British history, normally defined as including the reigns of the kings George I, George II, George III and George IV, i.e. covering the period from 1714 to 1830, (with the sub-period of the Regency, defined by the Regency of George IV as Prince of Wales during the illness of his father George III). Sometimes the reign of William IV (1830 to 1837) is also included.

Habbibu · 21/08/2008 15:45

Love these questions - they make me hunt for things I have no idea about.

MrsSprat · 21/08/2008 15:46

Yes - Georgian is the outer bit of the doughnut and Regency is the hole. In diagramatic terms

LIZS · 21/08/2008 15:46

Regency is George iii/iv so early 19th century

MrsSprat · 21/08/2008 15:48

Regency fashions - the birth of the empire line and Jane Austeny fashions

twinsetandpearls · 21/08/2008 15:49

dd costume is based in 1713 just to be awkward. We live in a town that was rebuilt after a fire in 1713, she is a child escaping the fire.

lol Mrs Sprat.

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twinsetandpearls · 21/08/2008 15:50

sorry I am wrong so it is not that awkward the fire was in 1731, switched my digits!

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Habbibu · 21/08/2008 15:54

Possibly anything charred, then? End of the Stuart period (queen Anne died 1714) and beginning of georgian - picture of queen anne. Ooh - useful site here

twinsetandpearls · 21/08/2008 15:54

Strictly speaking is it not Hanoverian? Or am I trying to be too clever?

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twinsetandpearls · 21/08/2008 15:54

We are going to artistically splatter them in soot!

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twinsetandpearls · 21/08/2008 15:55

great link habbibu

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Habbibu · 21/08/2008 15:56

Hanoverian (frantically googles) covers monarchs up to victoria - same family. Georgian more appropriate to period in time. I think.

wheresthehamster · 21/08/2008 15:57

Normally the description is based on the monarch's name TSAP. Stop trying to show off

twinsetandpearls · 21/08/2008 15:57

but no mention of empire line though, I was thinking of Jane Austen type dress but maybe that is not right.

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MrsSprat · 21/08/2008 15:58

Getting towards Gainsborough lady fashion and suchlike. Or just sooty rags perhaps.

Hanoverian, strictly speaking would be the icing on the doughnut, as it includes Victoria too

Habbibu · 21/08/2008 15:59

Are you hungry, MrsS?

MrsSprat · 21/08/2008 15:59

The Jane Austeny stuff is start of 1800s, definitely after the French revolution and rejection of aristocratic periwigs and the like.

MrsSprat · 21/08/2008 16:00

Yes!

Habbibu · 21/08/2008 16:01

Watch Blackadder the Third, twinset!

RustyBear · 21/08/2008 16:01

Jane Austen is later - 1790's - early 1800's, so closer to Regency.
1731 would be George II - we're talking hooped petticoats & general frills, rather than the plain simple empire line dresses

wheresthehamster · 21/08/2008 16:02

1731 is definitely 'georgian' but whether there was a specific type of fashion then I wouldn't know. I'd just do some Pride and Prejudice type dress if I was you.

twinsetandpearls · 21/08/2008 16:04

lol wheresthehamster I show off whenever I can, it does not happen that often!

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wheresthehamster · 21/08/2008 16:04
Grin
Habbibu · 21/08/2008 16:04

Actually, the Madness of King George would be almost perfect

twinsetandpearls · 21/08/2008 16:04

She is not to be in rags she is a posh georgian bird!

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