Cissy's Little Blue Dress

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Cissy’s LittleBlue Dress The Little Black Dress is Blue. The little black dress is cut simply, meant to be chic, inexpensive, versatile, season spanning, and always in style. Its origins are ascribed to Coco Chanel's 1920's collections and it became so prevalent in the well-dressed woman's wardrobe that it was often referred to simply as the "LBD". In Cissy's case, however, this wardrobe staple should be called the little blue dress. Cissy did have a couple of black dresses, but I suspect Madame Alexander didn't find black to be a color befitting a doll dress despite Cissy's grown up appearance. #2091, from her

By Debbie Foster & Katherine Mooney • © 2011 Dolls & their clothing from the Foster Collection


introductory year of 1955, was suitable for early evening with a fullskirted frock of black taffeta, narrow lace stole and fragile flowercovered pink hat. #2231 from 1958 is better known as the black velvet matinee sheath. It was very sophisticated with an interesting draped front skirt panel, spectacular tulle and rose trimmed blue hat and short blue mitts. But Cissy's wardrobe of navy taffeta is arguably the essential basic black in her closet. More common hat of natural straw with cornflower blue grosgrain ribbon edging brim.

1955, Cissy goes navy. One of the dressed dolls offered in 1955 was #2084, wearing the first of Cissy's navy taffetas. It was a full skirted little number with a removable short bolero jacket, topped off by a smart brimmed straw hat. The ample skirt was held out by a rustling taffeta and crinoline can-can petticoat. Following years brought a plethora of little blue dresses and as is apt to happen when little girls play dolls, the components that made up these similar yet different ensembles have become well mixed and matched. It can be extremely difficult and confusing to even the most astute, seasoned collectors to sort these pieces out. What follows is the little blue dress put-together, no longer mixed but matched, #2084 shown with matching with all the right parts!

bolero, closing at front with snap under ribbon bow.

The more flower blue h millinery n


e rare cornhat with fruit, net and lace.

The Bolero. Wide taffeta & crinoline can-can petticoat and dropped waist styling accentuates Cissy's tiny waist.

The #2084 Bolero Dress had a sleeveless scoop-necked, fitted bodice that was trimmed at the arm holes with a narrow strip of navy tulle, folded in half, gathered and then tacked to the shoulder seams. The dress had a dropped waistline and a very full skirt. The neckline was trimmed with a black gimp braid, as was the waist, with matching gimp trimming the edges on the short bolero jacket. The jacket closed in front with a single square snap concealed by a narrow white grosgrain ribbon bow. With this outfit, Cissy wore a medium brimmed hat, usually made of a natural straw and edged with cornflower blue ribbon and embellished with a ring of spring flowers or tiny fruit and dotted millinery net. The catalog described the hat as "cornflower blue straw," and the cornflower blue color was seen now and then, but the natural straw was by far the more common. There were no little blue dresses in the 1956 line, but Madame must have made a whopping good Navy tulle cap sleeves caught at shoulder seam. Black gimp braid at neck, dropped waist & edges of short bolero jacket.


buy on the dark blue fabric because 1957 was navy's banner year. Little blue dresses could be found on assembled dolls and in extra boxed fashions alike. Little blue dresses were everywhere!

The Pillbox, a fifties icon. Cissy could have chosen an extra fashion like #2140 ‑ a simple yet elegant navy taffeta dress with a cap sleeve and V-neck fitted bodice. The center of the dipped neckline had three tiny horizontal pleats followed by deep vertical darts on either side. They joined the full skirt at the bottom edge of the dropped #2140 had a fitted bodice with V-neckwaist and gave the line and cap sleeves. A staple in Mme. Alexander's design portfolio, this dropped bodice its shape. waistline style was seen on many outfits. A cropped, elbowExtra boxed pillbox hat sold separately. length Believed to be three color variations with giant flower; one off white with light cape pink rose spray & two black with light pink topped or wine colored rose sprays. the dress, closing at the throat with a square snap hidden by a circle of deep navy sequins. The short cape could have had a few whipped stitches that caught the front and back at the lower edge to form a sleeve.


Some did; others didn't. Perhaps the outfit came both ways. Cissy is fashionably chic in her little blue dress. Her ensemble was completed with a simple straw pillbox hat decorated with milliner's net and a spray of roses provided by a MiracleGro zealot. The unique and rare pillbox hat was yet another “extra” available for purchase. This ensemble came in several other colors ‑ royal blue, pink, emerald green­- all with different cape closing ornaments. To my knowledge, the only color that came on a dressed doll and with a matching pillbox hat was in shell pink. Short cape or bolero style jacket that came with the V-neck style dresses. Some were caught with a few stitches on the bottom edge to form a sleeve; others weren't. It's not known if this was a design intention. Each color had a different decorative neck closure.

#2140 from 1957 had a longer skirt and was worn as an afternoon- or early evening cocktail dress. Neither gloves nor hat was specified but a full can-can petticoat was a requisite.


Stunning navy & crisp white for 1957. #2141 had a fitted bodice with natural waistline, jewel neck and tiny gathered tulle sleeves, almost like a ruffle

#2141, released on a 1957 dressed doll, paired the always-in-good-taste navy with crisp white. This little blue dress had a jewel-necked and sleeveless bodice. The armholes were trimmed with gathered/ruched tulle that formed a short sleeve. The full skirt fell from a natural waistline and was accented by a rhinestone jeweled chatelaine watch. The crisp white part of the outfit was a cape with three tiers of graduated ruffled organdy caught at the raw top edge with organdy bias that tied under Cissy's chin. A white straw "bucket" hat lavished with white flowers and either short white mesh gloves or mid-forearm length fingerless mitts completed the sophisticated look. Mint dolls have been found wearing both styles of gloves so either is considered original. Also of note are Cissy's very interesting black sandals which have a wide elastic vamp and narrow off center angled straps. Cissy wore a lovely white lace petticoat under this dress instead of the usual taffeta can-can.


An oh, so blue inspiration. Madame Alexander was shown photographed in a dress believed to be the inspiration for three of Cissy's little blue dresses; the tiered cape set (#2141), #2146, this paragraph's object of discussion, and #2220, the subject of the next ensemble. #2146 was another dropped waist, capped sleeve dress with deep darts and tiny horizontal pleats that gave shape to the V-necked bodice. This outfit was coupled with a narrowly pleated white organdy stole which graced Cissy's shoulders. The stole actually consisted of two large loops that met in the middle, approximately at waistline height. The loop that wrapped around the shoulders snapped at the waistline for closure. There it formed the second loop that fell on the full taffeta skirt. This loop sported a pink rose corsage, adding interest to the sea of navy taffeta. Sold on a dressed doll, the outfit included a hat of white shaped buckram with grosgrain bound edges and running rows of ruched tulle that ended in the hat's center. There it was covered by


another corsage of Alexander signature pink roses. This lovely doll is also found, rarely, with yellow rose corsages.

Top view of ruched tulle hats, one with yellow- and one with pinktoned roses

FAO Schwarz's rare offering. Its identity a conundrum no more, this rare and unusual square neck taffeta dress with the rose adorned navy hat is #2220 (FAO Schwarz's #466-822) from 1957. The low-cut fitted bodice with cap sleeves had a full skirt of four inverted pleats, a most unusual treatment seen on just a few of Cissy's dresses. The petticoat was a luxurious flocked ivory organdy crinoline with a scalloped edge. A picture in the FAO Schwarz 195758 toy department's inventory list showed a short, closely wrapped organdy stole with a front snap closure covered by two pink roses. On Cissy's head was a wide


brimmed straw hat trimmed in matching tulle and three pink roses. Despite the picture's being in black and white, the dress and hat are distinguishable as the rare #2220. Since Madame Alexander had already issued two navy dresses with organdy wraps that same year, it is believed the faux fur stole, similarly styled, was substituted. An educated guess or a mystery solved? You decide. So ends this journey of Cissy's Little Blue Dress. And since records of Cissy and her Cissy wardrobe are mostly incomplete ponders and sketchy; studying, her reflection contemplating perfection and dreaming about from a mirrored her wardrobe silver configurations, is well, compact. No shiny a glorious and entertaining nose here. cheap thrill. Of course, it's "cheap" as in "inexpensive." At least until the collecting begins. Till then, conjure what you will; And enjoy Cissy's Little Blue Dresses. Questions, observations, discoveries and corrections are more than welcome. Please direct them to deb@debsdolls.com.


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