We found a runway shot of a shorter version of this dress and I love that this lets you can see how fantastic this sits on the body. This is from his made order line and he may have done a long version for the show as well but unfortunately there are not full records available for this time period. The other possibility is that the client saw the shorter version and ordered it in this full length. Either way this is classic Halston from his main label couture line. It is instantly recognizable as one of his looks and it is an incredible example of his work from this time period. I love it.
This is an amazing couture Halston dress and a very rare and special find. It is entirely cut on the bias and utilizes his signature minimal seaming. Halston defined how woman dressed in the 1970s and these jersey dresses that he did were tremendously flattering to the body. It is also insanely sexy while still being extremely comfortable to wear. The fabric is a beautiful deep forest green silk jersey that moves and drapes beautifully. This one is especially interesting because unlike its later counterparts it is actually two layers of the same silk jersey. The two layers have been stacked over each other and joined along the top edges and the hem. This gives the dress an inner lining and helps to soften out any bumps underneath the top layer which makes it very flattering to wear. Later dresses were not made like this because it literally doubled the cost of fabric to make them this way. The dress is made to be one long tube that expands outwards at the hem and has two long ties that extend out from the top of the halter at the front. You simply tie it at the back of the neck and then the long ties trail down the exposed back. The depth of the plunge can be controlled by how tight you tie the ties. On my dress form I have left it fairly loose and in the photo from the runway it is tied a bit higher. The front plunges into a scoop and the sides are cut on a curve to a low scoop. This leave the entire back completely bare and exposed. The halter skims over the breasts and then falls over the waist and hips. The skirt flares out at it reaches the floor and it has a ton of movement when you move. It is spectacular. This is a rare example of Halston at his very best and it is easy to see why his work is the subject of so many books and retrospective shows at museums worldwide. Excellent condition with a minor note below
Constructed from two bias cut layers of silk jersey with the ties extending out from the neckline. The dress slips on to wear and ties at the back of the neck. Hand finished. It is all bias cut which should allow for a bit of range of sizing. I see teeny pinhead size dark mark on the bodice and a couple of tiny hard to spot areas on the skirt that will not photo. I am being pretty picky. The fabric has some stretch and I have put the comfortable range of measurements laying flat. You could probably get a little more if needed.
Bust: if you let the plunge go extremely low, each halter is 4" across just above the bottom of the scoop. The halter just below the scoop will cover 13" across un-stretched. Where it meets the seam from the back it measures 15-19" flat across from side seam to side seam
Waist: 13-16" flat across from side seam to side seam
Hips: 17-21" flat across from side seam to side seam
Length: approx 60" from shoulder to hem, with 2" turned under the hem. The length can be adjusted by the ties at the neck
Modern Sizing Equivalent: XXS-MED
Item# DD4781
Reference Photo: Spring 1974 Halston Made-to-Order Fashion Show.
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