Edmund Dulac’s Tanglewood Tales: Jason Choosing Tiphys for the Voyage of the Argo Edmund Dulac’s illustration...
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Brassiere — U.S. Patent No. 1,115,674 (1914) is a clean technical drawing illustrating an early modern undergarment designed for improved support and comfort. Rendered in precise black linework, the sheet shows front and sectional views that clarify strap configuration, fabric panels, and fastening methods. The composition is strictly functional, using numbered references to explain construction rather than decoration. Its restrained drafting reflects patent-office conventions of the period. The image documents a key moment in the evolution of women’s clothing design.
M. P. Jacob was an inventor associated with early 20th-century garment innovation, a time when women’s fashion was shifting toward practicality and freedom of movement. Jacob’s patent reflects attention to anatomy, wearability, and structural efficiency rather than ornament. Though little personal history is widely recorded, the invention itself signals meaningful participation in modern clothing development. The drawing survives as a historical image of applied design thinking.
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