ABSTRACT

First published in 1966, View of Fashion is a collection of articles on fashions shows, parties and people in London, Paris, Italy and New York, including a section looking back to the surprising sportswomen of Victorian and Edwardian times. Lady M.P.s are observed from the Press Gallery of the House of Commons, the Headmistress and the Board of Governors are studied from the School Hall on Speech Day, tennis champions in the Players’ Tearoom at Wimbledon. Fuller figures descend upon Woburn Abbey by helicopter, model girls weather a stormy crossing on the Queen Elizabeth, fancy goods are reviewed at Brighton, costume exhibitions at the Victoria and Albert Museum, corsetry in the River Room at the Savoy. There are profiles of well-known personalities on the fashion scene and a section on men’s fashions and male models.

Alison Adburgham’s view of fashion is both accurate and acute; often unexpected, never distorted. It picks out the essential, mocks the meaningless and notes significance in the nuance. It is view with which Haro is in sensitive accord, and which he here brilliantly illustrates with ten full pages and many incidental drawings. This book will be of interest to students of fashion, journalism and social history.

part |30 pages

I

chapter |4 pages

The Fashion Writer's Predicament

chapter |5 pages

The Weather in the Salons

chapter |2 pages

Poised for Flight

chapter |2 pages

Blue Serge at St. Gingham's

chapter |2 pages

Cult of Mink

chapter |2 pages

Our Hats

chapter |3 pages

Boudoir and Boutique

chapter |3 pages

Large Girls and Femmes Fortes

chapter |2 pages

Backbones Are Out

chapter |1 pages

The Other Woman Never Knits

chapter |2 pages

Nothing to Lose But Your Head

chapter |2 pages

Neo-Rococo

part II|27 pages

Victorian and Edwardian Sportswomen

chapter |3 pages

All Summer in a Game

chapter |3 pages

The Ladies—Royal and Ancient

chapter |3 pages

The Squadron Lawn

chapter |3 pages

Veteran Ladies

chapter |3 pages

The Mode of the Mountains

chapter |3 pages

Any Old Grids?

chapter |5 pages

Elegant Ballooning

chapter |3 pages

The Immortal Goddesses

part III|32 pages

The Social Scene

chapter |3 pages

Ladies of the Marquee

chapter |2 pages

On with the Brides

chapter |2 pages

The Wimbledon Legend

chapter |3 pages

Charity at Midnight

chapter |4 pages

Fashion at Fishmongers Hall

chapter |3 pages

Ladies' Day in the Vaults

chapter |4 pages

Speech Days

chapter |2 pages

Saint-Laurent at Blenheim

chapter |3 pages

Debutantes' Dress Show

chapter |3 pages

One Victorian Evening

chapter |2 pages

The Queen Mother in the Crush Bar

part IV|20 pages

The Cult of Beauty

chapter |4 pages

One Neck, One Chin, and so Forth

chapter |3 pages

Faces à la Mode

chapter |2 pages

The World of Miss World

chapter |3 pages

The Body on the Beach

chapter |2 pages

Next to a Smile

chapter |5 pages

No Flies in Our Ointments

part V|32 pages

Fashion Abroad

chapter |2 pages

Mesdames, Mouches et Muffs

chapter |2 pages

Fashion for Fashion's Sake

chapter |2 pages

Collections and Parties

chapter |4 pages

Wholly Roman Empire

chapter |4 pages

Warm Squash at the Palazzo Pitti

chapter |2 pages

Home Truths from Abroad

chapter |3 pages

Madame Elégante

chapter |2 pages

“All the Prettiness Has Gone”

chapter |1 pages

Maison Dior—Automne/Hiver, 1965

chapter |3 pages

Gentiment Bitchy

chapter |3 pages

Export Argosy

chapter |3 pages

Climate of New York

part VI|19 pages

Lingerie

chapter |4 pages

Underneath the A-Line

chapter |3 pages

The Seen and the Unseen

chapter |2 pages

Conventions and Bye-Laws

chapter |1 pages

Frillies for Frau Schmidt

chapter |3 pages

Motivation Research

chapter |2 pages

The Hotel Bedroom Suite

chapter |3 pages

Next to Nothingness

part VII|33 pages

Personalities

chapter |4 pages

Lady M.P.s—The Tories

chapter |4 pages

Women M.P.s—The Socialists

chapter |2 pages

Monsieur Dior, Himself

chapter |3 pages

Beauty of Women and the Horse Beautiful

chapter |3 pages

Wimbledon Petticoats and Personalities

chapter |2 pages

American Tycooness

chapter |2 pages

Not So Shocking

chapter |3 pages

The Editor of ‘Vogue’

chapter |3 pages

Doyenne of Fashion Critics

chapter |3 pages

Fish and Fashion

chapter |1 pages

Balmain in London

chapter |2 pages

The Title Holder—Maria Bueno

part VIII|33 pages

Fashion in London

chapter |6 pages

Fashion with the Lid On

chapter |3 pages

What the Hats Foretell

chapter |2 pages

The Elegant Myope

chapter |2 pages

Scattered Showerproofs and Bright Macs

chapter |3 pages

Our Furry Friends

chapter |2 pages

All Man-Made Tears Are Drip-Dry

chapter |2 pages

The Psychology of Sweaters

chapter |2 pages

Alive, But Not Madly Kicking

chapter |1 pages

Long Live Hartnell

chapter |4 pages

Those Days and These

chapter |1 pages

Autumn Collections, 1962

chapter |2 pages

Delicious Inutilities

chapter |1 pages

Point of No Departure

chapter |1 pages

The Summer of the White Gardenia

part IX|22 pages

Exhibitions

chapter |3 pages

All Our Yesterdays

chapter |2 pages

Fancy Goods at Brighton

chapter |2 pages

Neo Art Nouveau

chapter |3 pages

Immortal Edwardian Wardrobe

chapter |2 pages

No Cliché Rosebuds

chapter |3 pages

Clothes Past

chapter |3 pages

Counter Revolution

chapter |3 pages

Weapons of Love

part X|20 pages

Men's Fashions

chapter |4 pages

Renaissance of the Dandy

chapter |3 pages

Millinery for Men

chapter |4 pages

Le Cocktail

chapter |3 pages

Legs and the Man

chapter |3 pages

The Male of the Species

chapter |2 pages

All Fancy, You Know