Thumbnail 1 of 5, A-Line Dress, Divinity - pattern designed and sold by IschemicNeuron.
Thumbnail 2 of 5, A-Line Dress, Divinity - pattern designed and sold by IschemicNeuron.
Thumbnail 3 of 5, A-Line Dress, Divinity - pattern designed and sold by IschemicNeuron.
Thumbnail 4 of 5, A-Line Dress, Divinity - pattern designed and sold by IschemicNeuron.
Thumbnail 5 of 5, A-Line Dress, Divinity - pattern designed and sold by IschemicNeuron.
A-Line Dress, Divinity - pattern designed and sold by IschemicNeuron

Divinity - pattern A-Line Dress

Designed and sold by IschemicNeuron
$55.18
Size
$55.18

Product features

  • Loose swing shape for an easy, flowy fit
  • Sizes run large, so order a size down from your usual
  • Print covers entire front and back panel with your chosen design, by an independent artist
  • 97% polyester, 3% elastane woven dress fabric with silky handfeel
  • Note that due to the production process, the placement of the print may vary slightly from the preview
  • The third party printer of this product is evaluated according to International Labor Organization standards
  • Since every item is made just for you by your local third-party fulfiller, there may be slight variances in the product received
Artwork thumbnail, Divinity - pattern by IschemicNeuron
Divinity - pattern
Background is based on astronomical illustrations of the moon by the astronomer Maria Clara Eimmart. From Wiki: "Maria Clara Eimmart (27 May 1676 – 29 October 1707), was a German astronomer, engraver and designer. She was the daughter and assistant of Georg Christoph Eimmart the Younger. Eimmart is best known for her exact astronomical illustrations done in pale pastels on dark blue cardboard. Between 1693 and 1698, Eimmart made over 350 drawings of the phases of the moon. This collection of drawings, drawn solely from observations through a telescope, was entitled Micrographia stellarum phases lunae ultra 300. Twelve of these were given to Luigi Ferdinando Marsili, a scientific collaborator of her father's, and ten survive in Bologna, together with three smaller studies on brown paper. Eimmart’s continuous series of depictions became the basis for a new lunar map."

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