Vintage 30s White Rayon Faille Gown | Victorian Revival Wedding Dress Project | Size S (Restoration/Costume)
Channel a bit of Miss Havisham romance with this authentic late 1930s rayon faille gown. Featuring a stunning basque waist, tiered skirt, and leg-of-mutton sleeves, this dress is a rare historical silhouette sold as a Restoration Project. Perfect for dyeing, costuming, or a brave textile lover.
Measurements:
- Bust: 32 inches – 34 inches (doubled) — Darts allow for a little room, but 34″ is the max.
- Waist: 27 inches (doubled)
- Hips: 40+ inches (Free/Open)
- Length: 50 inches (shoulder to hem)
- Modern Fit: Best fits a modern US Small (Size 4).
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More about this Item
This wedding dress is a hauntingly beautiful piece of history that needs a fairy godmother. Dating to the late 1930s (likely 1938–1940), it captures the “Victorian Revival” look that swept fashion just before WWII—a nostalgic turn toward romance and traditionalism as Europe teetered on the brink of conflict. Designers like Norman Hartnell were championing this neo-Victorian aesthetic for royal weddings and high society affairs, making historical silhouettes fashionable again after a decade of sleek, modernist bias cuts.
The silhouette is dramatically theatrical: puffed “leg of mutton” sleeves that taper at the wrist (a direct homage to the 1890s Gibson Girl era), a plunging V-neckline adorned with a row of 20+ fabric-covered buttons, and a dropped “basque” waistline—a fitted, pointed bodice that extends below the natural waist—that flows into a tiered, gathered skirt reminiscent of Victorian bustle gowns. This romantic historicism was Hollywood’s influence at work; period films like Gone with the Wind (1939) inspired brides to channel Civil War-era grandeur.
The fabric is a white Rayon Faille—a ribbed, weighted fabric with a subtle sheen that was the height of accessible luxury in its day. Rayon, the first manufactured fiber, was marketed as “artificial silk” and allowed middle-class brides to achieve the look of expensive silk faille at a fraction of the cost. This particular faille has that characteristic horizontal ribbing and body that made it perfect for structured gowns that needed to hold their dramatic shape.
Condition Report: Poor / Restoration Project (Sold As-Is)
We are selling this dame as found. She has been in long-term storage and shows significant signs of age.
- The Buttons: The original buttons are fabric-covered metal. The metal has rusted, bleeding rust stains onto the white fabric around the buttonholes and on the sleeves where they touched in storage. The buttons themselves are deteriorating.
- Stains: There are scattered storage spots, rust marks, and surface dirt throughout. We have not attempted to launder this (rayon faille is tricky!), so we cannot guarantee they will lift.
- Structure: There is seam pulling at the back waist and some stress at the zipper. The side metal zipper is original and functional but delicate.
- The Vibe: This is the ultimate candidate for a darker dye job (to hide the rust) or a theatrical costume piece for period productions set in the 1890s or 1930s.
Measurements:
- Bust: 32 inches – 34 inches (doubled) — Darts allow for a little room, but 34″ is the max.
- Waist: 27 inches (doubled)
- Hips: 40+ inches (Free/Open)
- Length: 50 inches (shoulder to hem)
- Modern Fit: Best fits a modern US Small (Size 4).





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