New York Times Fashionさんのインスタグラム写真 - (New York Times FashionInstagram)「Mary Quant, one of the best-known designers of the Swinging Sixties and the mother of the miniskirt, died on Thursday at 93. She was a creative and commercial trailblazer who put London fashion on the world map, writes fashion reporter @elizabethcpaton.  Synonymous with some of the defining styles of the era such as the miniskirt and hot pants, her colorful and unashamedly sexy clothes for a dramatically changing world were adored by celebrities like Twiggy and Audrey Hepburn and young girls on the street with new feelings of freedom alike. Emerging at the time of feminism’s second wave (after suffrage), Quant helped wipe out British postwar drabness and create a bold new attitude to dressing.  Beyond her clothes, Quant also became a recognizable figure in her own right, frequently photographed with her signature Vidal Sassoon five point bob and almost always wearing a mini, including when she received her Order of the British Empire from Buckingham Palace in 1966.  It didn’t just mean Quant was a high-profile fashion designer; she also became a powerful role model for working women.  Read more about Quant’s legacy at the link in bio. Photos by Keystone/Getty Images; Express/Getty Images; PA Images, via Getty Images; Evening Standard/Hulton Archive, via Getty Images; Mirrorpix/Getty Images.」4月14日 4時01分 - nytstyle

New York Times Fashionのインスタグラム(nytstyle) - 4月14日 04時01分


Mary Quant, one of the best-known designers of the Swinging Sixties and the mother of the miniskirt, died on Thursday at 93. She was a creative and commercial trailblazer who put London fashion on the world map, writes fashion reporter @elizabethcpaton.

Synonymous with some of the defining styles of the era such as the miniskirt and hot pants, her colorful and unashamedly sexy clothes for a dramatically changing world were adored by celebrities like Twiggy and Audrey Hepburn and young girls on the street with new feelings of freedom alike. Emerging at the time of feminism’s second wave (after suffrage), Quant helped wipe out British postwar drabness and create a bold new attitude to dressing.

Beyond her clothes, Quant also became a recognizable figure in her own right, frequently photographed with her signature Vidal Sassoon five point bob and almost always wearing a mini, including when she received her Order of the British Empire from Buckingham Palace in 1966.

It didn’t just mean Quant was a high-profile fashion designer; she also became a powerful role model for working women.

Read more about Quant’s legacy at the link in bio. Photos by Keystone/Getty Images; Express/Getty Images; PA Images, via Getty Images; Evening Standard/Hulton Archive, via Getty Images; Mirrorpix/Getty Images.


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