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The Noir Black Satin Immortelle Gown draws from the refined use of black silk satin in late 18th-century European court dress, where surface finish mattered as much as color itself. Unlike matte or heavily textured blacks reserved for mourning or restraint, black satin was employed for evening assemblies, formal salons, and candlelit court occasions—its subtle sheen designed to catch light and emphasize movement.
In the 18th century, satin silks were prized for their ability to enhance architectural silhouettes. When rendered in black, the fabric elevated the gown’s structure rather than softening it, allowing pleats, seams, and corseted shaping to read with clarity and authority. This made black satin a favored choice for gowns like the Immortelle Gown — Marie Antoinette–Inspired 18th Century Corset Gown in Noir Black Satin intended to communicate composure, confidence, and refinement without excessive ornamentation.
Inspired by the historic robe à la française, the Immortelle Gown is a modern corset dress interpretation rather than a historical reproduction. It honors the drama, structure, and romance of the 18th Century era while embracing contemporary atelier craftsmanship, comfort, and versatility.
Each gown features a fully built-in corset constructed with coated spiral steel boning for sculpted support and shaping. Four-inch modesty panels at both the front and back provide adjustability, comfort, and a personalized fit over time.
Designed to be worn over panniers, side hoops, or full hoop skirts, the Immortelle Gown is suited to formal events, renaissance faire, portraiture, and immersive historical environments. It may be styled with removable stomachers, layered skirts, and decorative panels to compose an ensemble tailored to the wearer’s desired silhouette.
The Noir Black Satin Immortelle Gown occupies a precise space between historical reverence and modern elegance. It is not a ceremonial reproduction nor a costume novelty, but a historically inspired corset gown designed for those who value structure, craftsmanship, and understated drama in a wearable form.
This offering is for the overdress only.
Skirts, panniers, hoop skirts, stomachers, and additional styling elements are purchased separately.
✧ Each Immortelle gown may vary subtly with the dye lot and character of its lace and fabric, ensuring that every collection — and every dress — carries its own gentle distinctions ✧
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Corseted form. Endless expression.
The Immortelle Corset Gown
An Immortelle gown is a corset overdress gown — structure and silhouette shaped as one.
The line is disciplined. The form is complete.
Restraint allows transformation.
Through interchangeable stomachers, skirts, and ornamentation, a single overdress shifts in presence and expression, again and again.
Nothing is fixed beyond what must endure. What remains is the architecture.
What evolves is the vision of the woman who wears it.
Below, you’ll find the skirts designed to complete and transform the Immortelle gown.

Skirts designed to shape, support, and transform the corseted form
FOUNDATIONS OF THE IMMORTELLE GOWN
Interchangeable fronts that shape the gown’s expression
The Immortelle Stomacher

A curated gallery of those who wear and interpret Immortelle garments, adornments, and jewelry.
The Immortelle Salon
Historically, salons were spaces where dress, art, and presence were shared and witnessed. The Immortelle Salon honors those who wear the house — capturing garments in life, movement, and personal expression.





























