The same year Flöge handmade the wedding dress for the mother of Gustav Klimt Heiress Maria Altmann.
[5] This style was promoted by the feminist movement in Vienna and was characterized by high bodices, a loose silhouette, and billowing sleeves.
At that time Emilie was eighteen years old and Gustav became a frequent guest at the home of her parents, spending the summers with the Flöge family at Lake Attersee.
[14] Klimt was painting many women from the upper echelons of Viennese society and thus was able to introduce Emilie Flöge to a prosperous client base.
[1] In the final days of the Second World War, her house in the Ungargasse caught fire, destroying not only her collection of garments, but also valuable objects from the estate of Gustav Klimt.
[20] In 2024, a contemporary sculpture, created and designed by children and the artist Stephan Goldrajch, is inaugurated in Brussels to recall the textile work of Émilie Louise Flöge.
The work is located opposite the Stoclet Palace, whose dining room wall decor was designed by Klimt, Émilie7's companion.