Waistcoat
This embroidered and quilted waistcoat was likely made from an imported English pattern that was subsequently cut, assembled, and lined by an American tailor. The cream silk satin front is quilted over cotton batting and embroidered in chain stitch with silk threads that were once shades of green, pink, and lavender. George Washington would have worn garments such as this one on formal occasions. Charles Wilson Peale's miniature portrait of Washington, painted in 1776, depicts him wearing a cream-colored waistcoat with similar embroidered borders.
See also W-460.
The center front and front skirt edges of the waistcoat, the lower edges of each pocket flap, and the slit for the pocket are outlined in chain stitch with a double line in graduated shades of mauve silk and a border of a floral vine entwining a linked chain in colors of green, mauve, lavender, and cream. The ground of the front waistcoat panels and the pocket flaps is quilted in a chain stitched diamond pattern adorned with simple crosses over each crossing. The waistcoat has been shortened on each side about one and a half inches at the pockets, just below the last button and buttonhole. The hip vents extend to the waist.
Published ReferencesCarol Borchert Cadou, The George Washington Collection: Fine and Decorative Arts at Mount Vernon (New York: Hudson Hills Press, 2006), 224-225.