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https://tweedlandthegentlemansclub.blogspot.com/2016/04/the-escape-and-evasion-maps.html
WW2 silk escape map dress sold in Harrogate
Published13
July 2016
. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-york-north-yorkshire-36783325
The dress,
made from 'escape and evade' maps, is thought to be from 1945-50.
Maps were
printed on silk during the war because it is durable and was easy to conceal in
soldiers' clothing.
Cathy
Smith, who sold the dress in Harrogate, said: "The fact that I could only
locate two examples in museums suggests to me that it's very rare."
Sara Jane
Murray, who collects escape and evade maps and bought the dress, said:
"These maps were issued to pilots and Special Forces in case they were
shot down, trapped behind enemy lines and needed to escape.
"Silk
doesn't degrade in water and can be folded up very small to be concealed inside
the lining of a uniform or the hollowed out heel of a flying boot."
A British
Army officer is credited with having the idea of printing escape maps on silk.
Ms Murray
said: "WW2 British silk escape maps were the creation of Clayton Hutton,
an eccentric MI9 British Army Officer who was the genius behind so many WW2
escape and evasion aids which are still in use today.
"Silk
is quiet, rustle free and easy to hide or sew inside clothing."
The Chic Garments Made From WWII Escape Maps
These silk military artifacts have been transformed
into hoodies, underwear, and a wedding dress.
BY HANNAH
STEINKOPF-FRANK DECEMBER 17, 2020
https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/wwii-silk-maps-clothes
English
printmaker Hester Cox knew she didn’t want a traditional white dress for her
North Yorkshire wedding in 2016. Her now-husband agreed. So Cox chose something
different: a dress made from silk maps of Scandinavia dating back to the 1940s.
Working with designer Sara Jane Murray, Cox chose maps of Sweden showing a pale
blue sea dotted with small islands. She based the style on a favorite sundress.
The unique garment received global media attention, but it’s not as
unprecedented as it may seem.
During the
second World War, M19 inventor Christopher Clayton Hutton created these silk
maps, which were used for escape and evasion. They became invaluable tools for
Allied forces shot down or taken as prisoners of war in Europe and the Pacific.
Hutton worked with Wallace Ellison, himself a POW in the First World War, to
figure out how to fix ink onto the maps.
As Erin
McCarthy details in Mental Floss, the company that printed Hutton’s silk maps
for him, John Waddington Ltd., also manufactured all of the country’s Monopoly
boards. After Hutton approached them, the Waddingtons set up a secret room in
their factory, where a select cadre of employees rejiggered the game
boards—punching small compartments into them, hiding the tiny tools, and
covering the hole with a game space decal.
The maps
were durable against the outdoor elements and could be easily hidden in a
jacket or boot. (And, of course, they were silent when unfolded.) Hundreds of
thousands of maps produced in Great Britain and the United States aided in some
750 escapes. They also represent wartime creativity when resources are scarce.
(During the same period, Maidenform made bras for carrier pigeons to keep them
contained against paratroopers’ chests as they fell from the sky.)
After the
war, fabric rationing continued in conflict-ravaged Europe, but a triumphant
British public wanted to celebrate and experience the material frivolity of
peacetime. The shortage encouraged returning soldiers to offer their maps to be
transformed into clothes, often by their wives and female loved ones. Fashion
historian Anna Vaughan Kett says the maps fit into the “Make Do and Mend”
message disseminated by the Ministry of Information to encourage reusing and
recycling clothing.
“We all
know the story about people who took down their curtains and made skirts out of
them,” says Vaughan Kett. “People genuinely used every scrap of fabric. And who
wouldn’t want to use a lovely soft rectangle of beautiful quality silk?”
The maps’
popularity was aided by the fact unlike other sewing materials, they weren’t
subject to the coupon system that limited the amount of purchasable fabric.
(Garments made from parachutes were also popular, including for weddings.) Maps
flooded the civilian market at surplus Army and Navy stores around the United
Kingdom. Given the maps’ relatively small size, garments like bra and panty
sets, as well as sun suits and rompers for children were common DIY projects.
But sewers also got creative in piecing maps together for dresses and the
popular housecoats of the era. Vaughan Kett says these full-skirted garments
represented a return to more excessive fabric use. A well-made map piece
required significant hand and machine stitching, and the precision of an
experienced garment maker to place the pattern in interesting ways.
Current
designers have risen to the challenge and are embracing the maps with modern
eyes. Paris-based brand BRUT, bringing new life to traditional military and
workwear, even made face masks with the maps. Christopher Raeburn, a
London-based designer, describes finding recycled military garments, products,
and other vintage artefacts for his brand RÆBURN as an archaeological process.
Raeburn says finding a stash of 1950s, Cold War-era silk maps seven years ago
was a serendipitous moment.
“I opened
an inconspicuous cardboard box at a vintage market booth, and like a needle in
a haystack, I found 800 untouched Royal Air Force navigation maps carefully
stacked away inside,” he says. “So intricately printed on luxurious silk, I
knew I had found something really special.”
Model/actress
Lily Cole and sustainable fashion leader Orsola de Castro have worn RÆBURN’s
map garments, which include a T-shirt dress, an anorak, and flowy trousers.
Amelie Jannoe, RÆBURN’s digital and creative content assistant, says the maps
have become an iconic part of the brand’s identity.
“These maps
were originally manufactured in a climate of fear and uncertainty, a feeling
that I’m sure we can all relate to in the current climate, and we have
transformed the fabric to serve a new function,” says Jannoe. “This design
still resonates with us today as it shows how transformation and creativity can
come from chaos.”
Having seen
some of the garments housed in museums around the UK, Vaughan Kett was taken by
the maps’ bright colors and elegant lines, but also haunted by their dark
history.
“If you
look closely at the maps they refer to places of war, battlefields, usually in
Asia,” she says. “There were terrible atrocities and terrible loss of life.”
Map
garments are fashion statements, but they’re also artifacts of war. Honoring
those who relied on them to survive is a way to remember and appreciate their
history. Even as styles change, the stories behind silk maps are being
preserved. The maps used in Cox’s wedding dress came from an ex-Army officer
whose father had used one in World War II. The original map was made into a
scarf, which the son (who has gone on to collect silk maps) still owns. He
asked Murray, the designer, to pass on photos of his parents to whoever ended
up with his maps. Cox said it was extra special to know the origin of her
garment.
She says,
“I haven’t worn it again yet but I hope to one day and it is hanging in our
bedroom for me to look at. It is a beautiful work of art.”
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