Two-piece evening dress of satin with lace. Designed by John Bright.

Maggie verver's evening gown was adapted from a dress brought out of Russia before the Revolution and kept in the original owner's family until acquired by Cosprop. The silk had perished but the lace was strong enough to be used once again.

Two-piece evening dress of plain and spotted net with panels of metallic-embroidered net over sprigged gauze and moir#0233 silk, trimmed with chiffon flowers and emroidered with sequins and chenille. Silk belt. Designed by John Bright.

Fanny was portrayed visually less exotic in the film than in the novel. Nevertheless, she conformed to her own theory "that nature itself had overdressed her and that her only course was to drown... the overdressing" in this fully-blown Edwardian outfit. It was adapted from an existing costume and has original floral trimming.

One-piece evening dress of satin with embroidered net lace and velvet, embroidered with sequins. Designed by John Bright.

This dress is one of twenty-eight outfits provided for the character of Charlotte Stant. It captures James's description of Charlotte as the "stem of an expanded flower, which gave her a likeness also to some long loose silk purse, well filled with gold pieces, but having been passed empty through a finger ring that held it together."