It is very rare that when I post that I will quote whole text as the bulk of a post. However I came across this little gem the other day from Time Magazine in 1961 giving a recap of the Haute Couture showings in Paris in 1961.
I am not sure who the author was, however a world of glamour and elegance is described at the eve of the beginning of the swinging sixties. Compared to the huge publicity grinding machines and spectacles that couture showings today demand, this seems like a dowager’s tea party. However I think that I would rather have tea with a dowager than attending a brash cocktail party which today’s showings tend to be.
“In the salons of haute couture in Paris last week, buyers and fashion editors from all over the world got their first look at the color and shape of the spring lines—and found themselves looking backward. The new look was the old look of the F. Scott Fitzgerald flapper in the 1920s. Skirts and coats were straight, short, with hemlines flaring. Shoes were square-toed. Bosoms were flat, backs bent and billowing, with designs that required the mannequins not only to slouch but virtually assume the posture of an expectant, concave catcher's mitt. Though Paris fashions have been irresolutely marching backward for several seasons, the big, bold step this year was apparently inspired by a hit movie running in Paris called The Crazy Years, a documentary of the '20s.
The Crazy Years designs produced as wild and improbable a week as the fashion world has known for many a year. At the house of Cardin, which drew the week's first applause for a superlative line, a mannequin was showing a new flat-chested dress to a U.S. buyer. She was suddenly interrupted with a scream from the vendeuse: "But darling, you're wearing it back to front!"
Cardin
When Madeleine de Rauch's collection failed to follow the flapper trend, the audience began to leave, and waiters dashed in with champagne to stem the bored retreat.
de Rauche
The triumph of the week and cause of the most excitement was the work of Christian Dior's little-known, untested Marc Bohan, 34. The Parisian-born son of a modiste, Bohan broke into haute couture in 1945 as an assistant designer at Patou, left Patou in 1958 to work under Dior's Boy Wonder Chief Designer Yves St. Laurent. When St. Laurent, after an unhappy stint in
the French army, "retired" from Dior two months ago because of "ill health," Bohan, one of the few married male couturiers in Paris, took over. Few in Paris expected much from his debut, and St. Laurent fans were openly hostile. Admitted the New York Herald Tribune's Eugenia Sheppard: "I had a poisoned typewriter ribbon ready."
the French army, "retired" from Dior two months ago because of "ill health," Bohan, one of the few married male couturiers in Paris, took over. Few in Paris expected much from his debut, and St. Laurent fans were openly hostile. Admitted the New York Herald Tribune's Eugenia Sheppard: "I had a poisoned typewriter ribbon ready."
Dior
But Bohan's hip-hugging skirts, exotic colors ("Laburnum yellow," "Provence apricot,"), and infinite attention to detail and neatness, generally embracing the flapper trend, stunned the salon and sent reporters into paroxysms of joy. "But Marc Bohan is wonderful," cried a converted Eugenia Sheppard. "Five minutes after the show started, I felt like a cat before a saucer of cream."
Dior
At the show's end, the audience was near delirium and jaded U.S. fashion editors at the outer tether of objectivity. "The shouting, clapping, surging mob at the press showing caused chaos in the elegant salon," reported the New York Times excitedly on Page One. "M. Bohan was pushed up against the boiserie, kissed, mauled and congratulated. Chairs were toppled. Champagne
glasses were broken. People were knocked down." Breathlessly cabled another U.S. reporter to her office: "Just dashed out of Dior to share with you still-boiling excitement." Wrote the New York Daily News's Monique: "Thundering applause led by a newly blonde Duchess of Windsor rolled through the elegant grey-and-white salons of the House of Dior today, the happy
ending to the suspense story of the fashion year."
glasses were broken. People were knocked down." Breathlessly cabled another U.S. reporter to her office: "Just dashed out of Dior to share with you still-boiling excitement." Wrote the New York Daily News's Monique: "Thundering applause led by a newly blonde Duchess of Windsor rolled through the elegant grey-and-white salons of the House of Dior today, the happy
ending to the suspense story of the fashion year."
*Don't forget to visit Mon Peche
how very, very 1961 of you.
ReplyDeleteI love them!
ReplyDeleteHello David:
ReplyDeleteIt is indeed remarkable to see the ways in which the promotion of fashion has changed over the years from what may be considered here as a somewhat softly softly approach compared with the hard thrust of today.
It's a very interesting post as usual.
ReplyDeleteI love these photos.
These Dior créations are absolutely beautiful.
Ditto everything that Dimitri said! Mark
ReplyDeleteAh the house of Dior! Stunning. LOved reading through this post & learning David!
ReplyDeleteNancy x
I must say, the '60s were glorious in terms of glamor and cutting edge design, even when they were harking back to the '20s! The house we're renovating that's taking all of my time is a '60s modern, designed by a student of Frank Lloyd Wright's. I would love the wardrobe above to match! Oh, and those feather purses you posted previously are divine.
ReplyDeleteSo elegant!
ReplyDeleteUn post extraordinaire!
♥ Franka
This is an easy way to improve one's mood:)
ReplyDeleteDelighful - as usual.
Norma, I thought so too. Something different.
ReplyDeleteInterweb, thankyou for your visit and comment. I love them too.
Jane and Lance, yes there has been a metamorphosis, the hard thrust of today is just that. Nothing refined about it.
Dimitri and Mark, being Marc Bohan's first Dior collection, they are a tour de force.
Nancy, you are too kind
Foolish, how wonderful! You will have to post photos.
Lisa, thankyou so much for the visit. I will check it out
Franka, many thanks. I think the clothes are fairly extraordinary.
Linnea, I am so glad that my posts improve your mood!
great post! love this kind of fashion history posts!
ReplyDeletei liked this part
"When Madeleine de Rauch's collection failed to follow the flapper trend, the audience began to leave, and waiters dashed in with champagne to stem the bored retreat."
David, it is such a wonderful, very interesting, informative post and I truly enjoyed it. I do not know how you do it at all - managing to post exquisite material every time! Thank you for that.
ReplyDeleteSadly, I still have a problem with posting comments. Just since my last post I have made several attempts to comment in your blog with no result. Today for some reason my comment went through in another Blog and I immediately came back to comment here. I have decided that it is time to get a new computer anyway and, perhaps, new settings will make a difference.I am wishing you wonderful day!
I'm still thinking about the Duchess of Windsor as a blonde!
ReplyDeleteBlond, that also was one of my favourite pieces as well. So elegant.
ReplyDeleteAnya, It is a problem which Google never resolved properly. I am finding on my MAc with Safari I have no problems
Devoted, I had to read that twice!
wow! i couldn't imagine that kind of appreciation for a show today.
ReplyDeletegreat post, david!
http://halfwhiteboy.blogspot.com/
those first two images are breath taking!!
ReplyDelete