If some do not understand the effect on little girls of dressing up, Edith Wharton does:
It was always an event in the little girl’s life to take a walk with her father, and more particularly so today, because she had on her new winter bonnet, which was so beautiful (and so becoming) that for the first time she woke to the importance of dress, and of herself as a subject for adornment -– so that I may date from that hour the birth of the conscious and feminine ME in the little girl’s vague soul.
(Quoted from page 89 of The Archaeology of Clothing and Bodily Adornment in Colonial America, by Diana DiPaolo Loren. University Press of Florida, 2010.)
For a brief biography of Edith Wharton, click here. For images of or relating to Edith Wharton, click here.
For a short biography of Diana DiPaolo Loren, click here. For images of or relating to Diana DiPaolo Loren, click here.
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