1947 wedding dress made by the bride from the silk parachute that saved the groom’s life during the war.

    by May_onnaise_959

    10 Comments

    1. May_onnaise_959 on

      In 1944, Claude Hensinger, an American
      serviceman, jumped out of his burning aircraft
      over war-torn Japan, deployed his parachute
      and eventually found his way to safety. After
      the war, his fiancée used material from the
      parachute to make her wedding gown.

    2. hatecriminal on

      Women in Europe used to harbor and shelter downed airmen in the hope that they’d leave the parachute with them upon rescue and recovery.

      Good deal all around, tbh.

    3. ageoldpoopride on

      In highschool, a man who had been a kid during WWII Britian told us that people would make underwear out of used parachutes

    4. I believe this was quite common. In Band of Brothers Lieutenant Harry Welsh mentions he’s still got his ‘chute because it’ll make a good wedding dress for Kitty.

    5. This was pretty common, not just for wedding dresses. There was a shortage of fabric and an abandoned parachute was a lot of free fabric. My grandmother was a seamstress during the war and told me lots of stories when I was a kid.

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