![House of Lanvin | Robe de Style | French | The Metropolitan Museum of Art | Jeanne lanvin, Lanvin, Fashion history House of Lanvin | Robe de Style | French | The Metropolitan Museum of Art | Jeanne lanvin, Lanvin, Fashion history](https://i.pinimg.com/474x/42/0f/1e/420f1e86944b69d5cffa6fb57f560cdb.jpg)
House of Lanvin | Robe de Style | French | The Metropolitan Museum of Art | Jeanne lanvin, Lanvin, Fashion history
Yellowbrick - This piece, the "Robe de Style" is by Jeanne Lanvin from fall/winter 1926–27. "She began designing full-skirted gowns that would come to be known in the 1920s as robes de
![Robe de Style "Colombine," by Jeanne Lanvin, winter 1924-25, at the Palais Galliera. Ivory silk taffeta, black silk velve… | Jeanne lanvin, Fashion, Fashion history Robe de Style "Colombine," by Jeanne Lanvin, winter 1924-25, at the Palais Galliera. Ivory silk taffeta, black silk velve… | Jeanne lanvin, Fashion, Fashion history](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/75/91/01/759101aa0b7ad428b5ff3fd7e86959a1.jpg)
Robe de Style "Colombine," by Jeanne Lanvin, winter 1924-25, at the Palais Galliera. Ivory silk taffeta, black silk velve… | Jeanne lanvin, Fashion, Fashion history
![Jeanne Lanvin is often credited with popularising the "Robe de Style" of the 1920s. (Not everyone was a "flapper"!) [Ca. 1924, Jeanne Lanvin, Source: De Young Museum] : r/fashionhistory Jeanne Lanvin is often credited with popularising the "Robe de Style" of the 1920s. (Not everyone was a "flapper"!) [Ca. 1924, Jeanne Lanvin, Source: De Young Museum] : r/fashionhistory](https://i.redd.it/dm773fjex6b61.jpg)
Jeanne Lanvin is often credited with popularising the "Robe de Style" of the 1920s. (Not everyone was a "flapper"!) [Ca. 1924, Jeanne Lanvin, Source: De Young Museum] : r/fashionhistory
![Jeanne Lanvin's Robe de Style: An alternative to “All that Jazz” fashions of the 1920's – Maryland Center for History and Culture Jeanne Lanvin's Robe de Style: An alternative to “All that Jazz” fashions of the 1920's – Maryland Center for History and Culture](https://www.mdhistory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/blogs//hb_C.I.56.49.1.jpg)