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1910–1919

1910s Lace Opera Coat

$150 – $4,000
Typical price range
★ Premium Material

Identifying Authentic 1910s Lace Opera Coat

Authentic 1910s lace opera coat pieces (1910–1919) are among the most sought-after items in antique fashion. Open decorative fabric made by looping, twisting, or braiding thread. Hand-made needle or bobbin lace is extremely valuable; machine-made lace (post-1830s) is more common and affordable.

When examining a potential 1910s lace piece, the most important diagnostic features are construction method, closure type, and fabric authenticity.Full-length formal evening coat worn over evening gowns for opera, theatre, and other formal occasions. Often in silk velvet, satin, or brocade with elaborate decoration.

Opera Coat Authentication Checklist

Look for elaborate embroidery, fur trim, or bead embellishment

Construction: often unlined at hem, lined at body with silk

Check for deep dolman or batwing sleeves — common in 1910s-20s

Opera loops: internal silk ribbons to hang from coat hooks are original feature

Identifying Authentic Lace

Hand-made: irregular pattern under magnification; slightly uneven thread tension

Machine-made: perfectly regular pattern; uniform thread thickness throughout

Identify type: needlepoint (single thread, needle-made), bobbin (plaited threads), Battenberg (tape lace)

Identify origin: Brussels, Honiton, Bruges, Venetian, Alençon each have distinctive patterns

Care & Preservation

Never machine wash. Hand wash very gently in cool water with pH-neutral soap. Lay flat on a towel to dry. Store rolled, never folded, on acid-free tubes.