Sunday, April 17, 2016

Heritage Square Fashion Show and Tea

 
Period dressers and Natalie Meyer (right), 
who created most of the show costumes
 
In 1969, the L.A. Cultural Heritage Board created Heritage Square, a living history and architecture museum, where local Victorian-era houses and other buildings are collected and preserved. Visible from the Arroyo Seco (110) freeway, the colorful two-story homes are hard to miss as you're driving from downtown L.A. to Pasadena.

As attractive as Heritage Square is, I had never been. So when I got an email about a fashion show happening there yesterday, I contacted my friends Karen and Vicki, who had also never been, and bought tickets.

Sponsored by the Costumer's Guild West, the show featured fashions from the 17th up to the mid-20th centuries. Most of the outfits were created by Natalie Meyer, costumer for the Heritage Square Museum. Many audience members also dressed-up, making for quite a festive day. Tea and scones followed the show, before we toured two of the museum's restored homes. A third house, currently undergoing renovation, was stripped down to its slat walls and wood floors—fascinating to see.

Heritage Square Museum is open Friday, Saturday, Sunday, and most holiday Mondays, 11:30AM-4:30PM. Highly recommended if you're interested in L.A. history and/or late 19th-century architecture.

The day's fashions:























The homes:


 Mt. Pleasant house (1876)
Hale house (1887)
Lincoln Ave. Methodist Church (1897)
John J. Ford house (1887)

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