About the exhibition Costume Balls

Step into the world of the exhibition!
Creating the exhibition Costume Balls: Dressing Up History, 1870-1927 is the result of a monumental effort. Explore and meet the Museum's teams of experts and learn more about their work and their discoveries through blog articles, video interviews, behind-the-scenes photos, and much more!

Blog

Costume Balls in the Museum’s Collections

Assembled over the past century, the McCord Stewart Museum’s vast collections are an extraordinary trove of visual, material and print culture. Why were these mementoes from costume balls saved in such abundance, and for generations?
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Blog | Videos

Among all the treatments involved in restoring and mounting the costumes for the exhibition, the team shares with you the challenges and successes of this project.

Books in the exhibition

Guidebooks, fashion plates and picture books
Inspiration for characters and costumes came from a wide range of sources, including guidebooks offering encyclopedic lists of characters, descriptions of what to wear, and sometimes even patterns that could be purchased by mail order.

Souvenir publications
The efforts put into creating souvenirs of these events reveal their importance to those who organized and attended them. Souvenir publications were created for the balls that Lady Aberdeen organized in 1896 in Ottawa and 1897 in Toronto.
See the books

Conservation team

The exhibition gave the Conservation department an exceptionally complex and wide-reaching assignment. For a period of two years, a team of five people found themselves immersed in an environment where, almost daily, they were confronted with a complex garment or accessory that was most often made to last for a single evening, yet had survived for over a century. The ephemeral nature of the objects, the distinct character and history of each one, as well as the atypical abundance of archival sources are some of the aspects of this collaborative project that made it so enriching.

Caterina Florio | Head, Conservation

Caterina oversees the department’s active treatment program, facilitates the display of the collection and plans its preservation. With a strong interest in how museums function and what they can achieve, she is committed to the wider relevance of conservation as regards both museum practices and society outside the lab.

Caroline Bourgeois | Conservation Assistant

In accordance with the strictest museum standards, Caroline has developed special expertise in the design and creation of mannequins and mounts for historic and contemporary clothing in the Dress, Fashion and Textiles and Indigenous Cultures collections.

Sonia Kata | Conservator

With a master’s in Art Conservation, Sonia appreciates the opportunity to work with cultural heritage in a tangible way. Although she treats a variety of historic objects at the Museum, as an avid sewer, she has a particular interest in costumes and textiles.

Amelia Desjardins | Conservation Technician

Specializing in costume mounting affords Amelia the unique opportunity to combine her passion for fashion history with practical experience in costume making. Drawn to object biographies, she delights in becoming part of their journey by safely presenting them in their best light through the creation of custom mannequins and mounts. 

Camille Lafrance | Conservator

Camille holds a bachelor's degree in historical science and heritage studies from Université Laval in Quebec City and a master's degree in textile conservation from the University of Glasgow in Scotland.  With this project, she was able to apply all the skills gained during her training in a professional setting.

Online Collections

Assembled over the past century, the Museum’s vast collections are an extraordinary trove of visual, material and print culture. Conspicuously overrepresented within this historical record are images, garments, documents, ephemera and other objects that bear witness to lavish costume balls and skating carnivals held in the late nineteenth and early twentieth Centuries.
Explore the objects

Why don't we always wear gloves?

Before handling objects, conservators have to take a lot of things into account. The decision to wear gloves–or not–is based on an object's material composition, its condition, history, and any past conservation treatments. Textile conservators, for instance, sometimes choose not to wear gloves when handling costumes. Instead, they prefer to work with clean, dry hands, as gloves can reduce dexterity and diminish the tactile sensitivity needed to assess the condition and stability of textiles.

The team in action!

  • Mounting the exhibition. Roger Aziz © McCord Stewart Museum, 2024
  • Mounting the exhibition. Roger Aziz © McCord Stewart Museum, 2024
  • Mounting the exhibition. Roger Aziz © McCord Stewart Museum, 2024
  • Mounting the exhibition. Roger Aziz © McCord Stewart Museum, 2024
  • Mounting the exhibition. Roger Aziz © McCord Stewart Museum, 2024
  • Mounting the exhibition. Roger Aziz © McCord Stewart Museum, 2024
  • Mounting the exhibition. Roger Aziz © McCord Stewart Museum, 2024
  • Mounting the exhibition. Roger Aziz © McCord Stewart Museum, 2024
  • Mounting the exhibition. Roger Aziz © McCord Stewart Museum, 2024
  • Mounting the exhibition. Roger Aziz © McCord Stewart Museum, 2024
  • Photography studio. Laura Dumitriu © McCord Stewart Museum, 2023
  • Photography studio. Roger Aziz © McCord Stewart Museum, 2023
  • Photography studio. Roger Aziz © McCord Stewart Museum, 2023
  • Photography studio. Roger Aziz © McCord Stewart Museum, 2023
  • Photography studio. Roger Aziz © McCord Stewart Museum, 2023
  • Photography studio. Roger Aziz © Musée McCord
  • Textile conservation laboratory. Laura Dumitriu © McCord Stewart Museum, 2023
  • Textile conservation laboratory. Laura Dumitriu © McCord Stewart Museum, 2023
  • Textile conservation laboratory. Laura Dumitriu © McCord Stewart Museum, 2023
  • Microfading test. Laura Dumitriu © McCord Stewart Museum, 2022
  • Microfading test. Laura Dumitriu © McCord Stewart Museum, 2022
  • Costume mounting studio. Laura Dumitriu © McCord Stewart Museum, 2023
  • Costume mounting studio. Laura Dumitriu © McCord Stewart Museum, 2023
  • Costume mounting studio. Laura Dumitriu © McCord Stewart Museum, 2023
  • Costume mounting studio. Laura Dumitriu © McCord Stewart Museum, 2023
  • Costume mounting studio. Laura Dumitriu © McCord Stewart Museum, 2023
  • Costume mounting studio. Laura Dumitriu © McCord Stewart Museum, 2023
  • Costume mounting studio. Laura Dumitriu © McCord Stewart Museum, 2023
  • Costume mounting studio. Laura Dumitriu © McCord Stewart Museum, 2023

McCord Stewart Discoveries

Play video

Threads of Black Emancipation in an Eighteenth-Century Dress

A photograph of a young woman wearing her ancestor’s dress for a 1927 costume ball led to the unlikely discovery of the garment in a Laurentians cottage in 2022.
Watch video