When Women Ruled Fashion


The Empress Eugénie Surrounded by Her Ladies-in-Waiting, by Franz Xaver Winterhalter, 1855.
"As the story is usually now told, Charles Frederick Worth (1825–1895), often described as a French couturier of British origin, created the institution of haute couture. This take on fashion history defines the most respected sector of the fashion world—the sector where the economic stakes are highest—as having always been what it largely is today: a male preserve. It’s true that, despite such notable exceptions as Coco Chanel, beginning with the founding of the Maison Worth in 1858, the great fashion houses have been run by men. From today’s vantage point, it seems as if it’s always been the same scenario: men designing women’s clothing and dictating not only color and skirt length but the ideal shape for the female body—even the types of undergarments to be used to achieve perfect proportions. But the history of haute couture is more than an all too predictable chronicle of famous tailors. ..."
Laphams Quarterly

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