1960–1969
1960s Brocade Circle Skirt
Identifying Authentic 1960s Brocade Circle Skirt
Authentic 1960s brocade circle skirt pieces (1960–1969) are among the most sought-after items in antique fashion. Richly decorative shuttle-woven fabric with raised patterns of flowers, foliage, or geometric motifs in metallic or contrasting threads. Used for formal wear across all eras.
When examining a potential 1960s brocade piece, the most important diagnostic features are construction method, closure type, and fabric authenticity.Full circular skirt cut from a single or multiple circles of fabric. The iconic silhouette of 1950s fashion, often worn over crinolines.
Circle Skirt Authentication Checklist
True circle cut creates 360-degree fullness when laid flat
Original 1950s: cotton, wool or taffeta; not polyester
Look for attached crinoline or separate petticoat references in construction
Waistband style: wide with interfacing indicates 1950s; narrow indicates later
Identifying Authentic Brocade
Pattern is woven into the fabric structure, not printed or embroidered
Check back of fabric: woven floats should be visible between pattern elements
Metallic brocade: gold or silver thread; check for real metal vs metallic polyester (post-1970s)
Victorian brocade: silk base with heavier, stiffer structure than modern versions
Care & Preservation
Dry clean only. Never crush or fold brocade — the raised woven pattern is permanent and crushing flattens the design. Store hanging or rolled. Keep away from moisture.
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