J. L. Nevinson’s study traces the origins of the fashion plate, the illustrated print that carried the latest styles to readers long before photography. Beginning with early costume engravings, it follows the form’s development into the colored plates that defined nineteenth-century fashion magazines and shaped public taste.
A scholarly contribution to dress and print history, the essay examines how images of clothing were produced, circulated, and copied across Europe. Nevinson connects the rise of the fashion plate to the wider commerce of fashion and the growth of the illustrated press. A focused, well-documented account, it is available here as a free EPUB download.