Entries from the category 'fashion history'
Posted by Rebekah Roy on June 24th, 2011
I recently received a lovely press pack for the HBO series Mildred Pierce. I received a vintage hat and a DVD with the first episode of Mildred Pierce, which will air on Sky Atlantic HD on Saturday at 9pm. If you’ve read the book or watched the 1945 film with Joan Crawford you’re going to enjoy this 5-part series.
We’ve had Mad Men, Boardwalk Empire and now we have Mildred Pierce. It’s set in America during depression with Kate Winslet as Mildred Pierce. In the first episode Mildred is looking for a job and what’s interesting is she’s wearing a day dress with a little hat – a look you often see in east London – only with makeup that is slightly more modern.


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Girl with the Dragon Tattoo & H&M
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Tags: costumes
Posted by Rebekah Roy on July 10th, 2008

I can sit around for hours and read books like these: Taschen’s The Collection of the Kyoto Costume Institute

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The Height of Men and the Fendi Heel
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Swinging London – 1960s fashion
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This video is about Swinging London in the '60s. What I love about the video is that it captures a fashionable side of...
Velcro
Just incase you were wondering how VECRO came about!
"In 1941, a Swiss inventor called George de Mestral noticed
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Tags: Fashion History, Kyoto, Kyoto Costume Institute
Posted by Rebekah Roy on January 19th, 2008



Liberty of London: Designs of Our Times
Anna Buruma is the archivist at Liberty of London and she spoke at the V&A’s Friday evening talk. (You can see her in the 3rd image, she’s wearing a black dress with a red necklace). I wanted to go to this lecture because Liberty has been such an important part of London’s fashion history for more then a century and I also love some of their handbags!
Sir Arthur Lasenby Liberty opened his first shop with three employees on Regent Street in 1875, where he sold ornaments, fabrics, antiques and artifacts from Japan and the Far East. Liberty quickly expanded to include fashionable clothing and furniture as well as decorative items such as vases, clocks, jewellery, textiles, and wallpapers. In 1877-78 the South Kensington Museum (now the V&A) purchased antique embroideries and rugs from Liberty.
Liberty catered for an eclectic mixture of popular styles while developing his own distinct style. Although many designers and artisans worked for Liberty, the store’s policy of maintaining the anonymity of its designers allowed the shop to create the Liberty Style. In 1890 Liberty opened a shop in Paris, and the shop became synonymous with Art Nouveau, so much so that in Italy the new style became known as Stile Liberty!
In 1884, Liberty asked architect-designer Edward William Godwin to set up the “Artistic Costume Studio” to showcase Liberty designs and fabrics. They made dresses for its elite clientele, including Isadora Duncan and Mrs. Andrew Carnegie. Proust bought his ties there, and Gilbert and Sullivan dressed their casts in his fabrics. The demand Liberty created for his fabrics was greater than the resources of his suppliers and he decided to import ready woven fabric and dye and print them in the UK. Liberty relied on the experts of two printing companies: Thomas Wardle of Leek, in Staffordshire and Edmund Littler of Merton Abbey in Surrey. By the 1890s Merton Abbey was sending its entire production to Liberty and in 1904 Liberty purchased the company.
Liberty had become famous for its prints and textiles and by the 20th century Liberty fabrics were used by great designers like Paul Poiret, Yves Saint Laurent, Cacharel and Jean Muir.
It’s important to understand how relevant and popular these prints still are today. Just take a look at Luella using Liberty prints for her Spring 2008 collection!

Sir Arthur Lasenby Liberty – timeline:
born August 13, 1843
1864-1874 Worked at Farmer and Rogers’ Great Shawl and Cloak Emporium in London, and later at the firm’s Oriental Warehouse.
in 1875 Rented 1/2 of a shop 218A Regent Street and named it the “East India House”
expanded the shop 1876, 1878, 1883, 1924;
produced Liberty Art Fabrics, from 1878;
introduced Umritza Cashmere, 1879;
opened furnishing and decoration department, 1883;
debuted costumes, 1884;
introduced jewelry and metalwork, 1899;
opened Birmingham branch, 1887;
open Paris branch, 1890;
became public company, 1894;
died in May 11, 1917
Liberty of London, of course, continued on well after the death of Sir Arthur Lasenby Liberty, expanding it’s operations even further:
opened branch in Manchester, 1924;
established Liberty and Company Ltd., wholesale company, 1939;
acquired Dutch firm, Metz and Company, 1973;
expanded men’s offerings in flagship store, late 1990s;
opened U.S. distribution center in Fort Worth, Texas, 2000;
acquired by real estate company Marylebone Warwick Balfour, 2000.
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Tags: Fashion History, handbags, Japan, jewellery, Liberty of London, V&A Museum