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1837–1901

Victorian Net & Tulle Tea Gown

$150 – $8,000
Typical price range

Identifying Authentic Victorian Net & Tulle Tea Gown

Authentic victorian net & tulle tea gown pieces (1837–1901) are among the most sought-after items in antique fashion. Open mesh fabric used for crinolines, overlays, and underpinnings. Silk tulle was used for Victorian ball gowns; nylon net became the foundation of the 1950s petticoat.

When examining a potential victorian net & tulle piece, the most important diagnostic features are construction method, closure type, and fabric authenticity.An informal, uncorseted gown worn at home for afternoon tea. Pioneered aesthetic dress reform and represents some of the most artistic and collectible Victorian and Edwardian garments.

Tea Gown Authentication Checklist

Flowing construction without boning — designed to be worn without corset

Look for artistic embroidery, lace insertion, or Liberty-print silk

Often influenced by Japanese or medieval aesthetic movements

High collector value; museum collections hold many fine examples

Identifying Authentic Net & Tulle

Silk tulle: extremely fine, soft, slightly warm to touch; burns like silk

Nylon net (post-1940s): springy, cold to touch, much more durable; burns with black smoke

Victorian ball gown layers: multiple tiers of silk tulle over a silk base

1950s petticoat netting: stiffened with sugar solution (try brushing lightly — stiffness indicates original starch)

Care & Preservation

Handle with care — net is easily caught and torn. Hand wash gently in cool water or dry clean. Store away from rough surfaces. Nylon net can be hand-washed; silk net requires dry cleaning.

Other Victorian Materials

Other Victorian Garments

Tea Gown in Other Eras