I CAN MAYBE HELP. shirtwaists and lack of fuss were more business. Hats large. Irene [email protected] note.middle ibitial. In email, r. Sent from my Verizon Wireless 4G LTE DROID Joyce Presnall via <[email protected]> wrote: >I have a picture just labeled "Mrs Fleury" and I think I know who it may be >but am not 100% sure. This lady MAY have been a business woman in that >time period and that MAY be affecting the fact that I cannot find anything >similar to her style of dress on site I find on google. > >If anyone is good at dating NYC women's dress late 1800's to early1900's >(she died 1909) please let me know. I can show you a copy of this picture >off list. > >I don't even know what is in fashion NOW, no less what was in fashion a >century or more ago LOL >MY idea of fashion is Blue Jeans and a T-shirt--or a nice blouse to go >out...I'm in the Pacific Northwest--everybody here wears jeans for >everything--even in some of the nicer restaurants--(as long as jeans are >fairly new and not faded LOL) > >Thx for any help... > >Joyce > >-- >Researching Stephenson/Stevenson, Fleury, Heald, Lindelof, Young, Rubino, >Cammarota, Mandracchia, Vaiarelli, Mulhern, Johnson, Haight, Erickson, >Munson, Northrup, Sears, Camp, Gunn, Allen, Gorham, Plumb, Beard, Rogers, >Eliot, Briscoe, Bradley, Mix, Wilmot, Pritchard, Mew, Stone, Sparke, >Bayley, Bailey, Redfield, Redfin, Howland, Tilley, Sturgis, Hinckley, Kirk, >Norton, Gerard, and many more... > >------------------------------- >To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message