Although black was commonly worn to signify grief, mourning practices became widespread in Victorian times following Queen Victoria’s reaction to her husband’s death in 1861. Consequently, loose traditions developed into a complex array of signs, customs and symbols, extending from dress etiquette to funerary custom, to fixed periods of seclusion that reached across all classes.
These two hastily made mourning dresses invite morbid speculation. What were the circumstances leading to their production? What was the nature of their relationship to the deceased?