Weigel was born on 11 February 1847 in Posen,
Prussia (present-day
Poznań, Poland). She was the second of five children born to August Astmann and his wife Emilie, née Sachs. – 7 February 1915), born in
Brunswick, Germany. They left for Australia aboard
Mysore, arriving in Melbourne on 4 March 1877. According to Weigel, she and her husband were in Australia on an extended honeymoon when she started cutting paper patterns for Melbourne friends who admired her dress sense. Within a year, with the help of a few staff in a small house in
Fitzroy, she was producing patterns and marketing them
mail-order as "American Paper Cut Patterns" from premises in
Eastern Arcade, Melbourne, and soliciting for "agents everywhere". In 1880 she began publishing a monthly "Weigel's Journal of Fashions", edited by her accountant, Mrs Thompson, with illustrated descriptions of the latest English and American fashions, adapted for Colonial conditions. Later that year the magazine was also being published in Sydney, and she had a retail establishment at 313
Pitt Street. Around 1885 she built offices and a factory at 229 Lennox Street (the Rowena Street corner),
Richmond where they printed the tissue-paper patterns on their own machines. Her husband Oscar's magazine production team adopted
photoengraving for Phil Ashley's artwork and installed a
monotype press. A free pattern was included with each issue. In 1893 Oscar was
naturalized, hence also was Johanna. After Oscar's death, Johanna returned to Melbourne, and lived for some time in
St Kilda. == References ==