CHICAGO, IL.- The Chicago History Museum announces the launch of the online
Digital Collection which currently features 1,382 digital images representing nearly 400 costumes, accessories, and fashion drawings including all costume materials exhibited in the museums Charles James, Dior, Bertha Palmer, Chic Chicago, and I Do exhibitions. The official launch of the Digital Collection is on July 10, and will be accessible from the Chicago History Museum website. The Digital Collection is made possible by a generous donation from the Costume Council of the Chicago History Museum.
Garments by Gianni Versace, Christian Dior, Charles James and Cristóbal Balenciaga headline the content on the Digital Collection. In addition to hundreds of garment and accessory images, the website also features videos of CT scans of garments constructed by designer Charles James and 103 sketches by James illustrator Antonio Lopez. Images are offered at extremely high resolution with zooming tools allowing users to examine artifacts stitch by stitch.
The digital collections portal offers researchers, students, scholars, designers, and fashion aficionados a significant fashion resource and a rich source of historical information, said Chief Collection Manager, Alison Eisendrath. The factor that makes this digital collection such a unique and valuable resource is that the artifacts are represented not only by the vibrant digital images, but they are also accompanied by their full catalog record, including detailed information on who wore it, who designed it, and its relationship to fashion history and Chicago history.
With over 50,000 costumes and textile artifacts from the mid-18th century to the present, the Chicago History Museums Costume Collection is the second largest in the world and one of the nations most complete fashion repositories.
The digital resources currently available through the site only begin to hint at the richness of the content we hope to add over the coming months and years, said Eisendrath. Although the Digital Collection website has launched featuring selected highlights from the costume collection, the Museum will continue to add images from its treasure trove of paintings, sculptures, decorative arts, and historic artifacts, along with images of additional costume materials.