Caroline Reboux

Caroline Reboux

Infobox Person
name = Caroline Reboux


image_size = 200 px
caption =
birth_name =
birth_date = 1837
birth_place = Paris, France
death_date = 1927
death_cause =
resting_place = France
resting_place_coordinates =
residence =
nationality = French
other_names =
known_for = famous French milliner
education =
employer =
occupation = fashion designer
title =
salary =
networth =
height =
weight =
term =
predecessor =
successor =
party =
boards =
religion =
spouse =
partner =
children =
parents =
relatives =


website =
footnotes =

Caroline Reboux (1837 – 1927) was a well known Parisian milliner and French fashion designer. Adler, p. 403-4 ] Lambert, biography: Caroline Reboux ] She had white hair and a "girlish" look.

Reboux made an artform out of high fashion hats which were re-emerging in France to supplant the bonnet in the mid-nineteenth century. She promoted the hat as an essential accessory for women's fashion.

Like many of her customers, Reboux was self-invented: she put it about that she was the fourth child of an impoverished noblewoman and a man of letters, who was orphaned and came to Paris to live. Steele (1998), p. 72]

Queen of the milliners

Reboux, the "Queen of the Milliners." Shaw, Item notes: v.18 1898 Jul-Dec ] cite web|url= http://www3.fitnyc.edu/museum/Arbitersofstyle/reboux.htm|title= Caroline Reboux|accessdate= 2008-08-24] made a name for herself in millinery in the later part of the 1800s and the early part of the 1900s in Europe and the United States. She employed as many as 150 workwomen at any one time. She is also closely associated with the origins of haute couture and her hat designs ranked at the same level as that custom fashion. Red Hat Society, p. 16 ]

Reboux opened a shop at 9, avenue Matignon, Paris, in 1865 where she worked throughout her life. Retaining this shop as her base, she opened other stores in Paris and London. She assisted others that she trained to open shops in New York and Chicago. She was known for over fifty years as the queen of creative fashion hats. Her designs were as much sought after as those of Charles Frederick Worth, considered the father of haute couture. cite web|url= http://www.fdci.org/MediaRoom/ArticleDetails.aspx?AID=3|title= Fashion Design Council of India|accessdate= 2008-08-24]

Reboux was the first person in fashion design to add a veil to a woman’s hat and launched it in the 1920s. [ Contini, Mila, Odyssey Press (1965), Fashion, from Ancient Egypt to the Present Day, p. 254; "Caroline Reboux was the first person in the history of fashion to think of adding a little veil to the hat, swathing the feminine face in a mist ...."] She also started the vogue of colored veils. Reboux made many fashionable hats for the theater.

Reboux is the creator of the cloche hat and popularized it in the 1920s. Litoff, p. 69 ] She designed the unstructured felt hat which first appeared in the 1920s. Reboux would create the hat by placing a length of felt on a customer's head and then cutting and folding it to shape. She was always one of the leading exponents of the form. [ Dilys, p. 22 ]

Reboux also did innovative unique models up-dating past modes such as the large-brimmed straws known as Gainsborough hats, and the turban-like toques in the manner of Mme Vigée-Lebrun's sitters.

Reboux worked with most of the major fashion designers of Europe and provided women hats for their design collections. A notable business practice of Reboux was to divide half the profits of her business amoung the head cashier, the forewoman, the directress of the workroom, and the head manager. Reboux was appointed to represent Parisian commerce at the Paris World’s Fair of 1900. During Reboux's life she maintained a great friendship with the fashion designer Madeleine Vionnet. The Caroline Reboux business finally closed its doors in 1956. More than 300 creations by Reboux are preserved at the Musée de la Mode et du Textile in Paris.

Famous clients

Marlene Dietrich was a faithful customer of Reboux, from whom she bought her trademark berets, which had never been worn by women before. [ [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9500E5DB163FF931A15754C0A9659C8B63&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss "That effortless Dietrich glamor", "The New York times", July 22, 2003] Accessed 24 August 2008.] The exhibition of Marlene Dietrich "Birth of a Myth" was held at the fashion museum Musée Galliera (Paris) in 2003 exhibing fashions of Reboux. There are today headdresses signed "Caroline Reboux" in the vitrines devoted to Marlene Dietrich at the Deutsche Kinemathek film museum of Berlin. Many famous designers of fashion of the twentieth century were trained by Reboux.

Reboux creations from the 1860s attracted the attention of Princess Pauline de Metternich [ Garland, p. 40 ] and the Empress Eugénie. [ Palmer, p. 123 ] Steele (2005), p. 412] The famous American milliner Lilly Dache trained under Reboux for five years. Elsa Triolet was also a regular store customer on Avenue Matignon, sometimes accompanied by Louis Aragon.

After death

Wallis Warfield Simpson, Duchess of Windsor, wore a Mainbocher outfit in pancake beige and a hat by Reboux at her wedding to the former king of England, Edward VIII at the Château Candé, Monts, June 3, 1937. [ [http://12.151.120.44/works_of_art/collection_database/the_costume_institute/wedding_ensemble/objectview.aspx?page=4&sort=0&sortdir=asc&keyword=&fp=1&dd1=8&dd2=0&vw=1&collID=8&OID=80002265&vT=1 The outfit is conserved at the Costume Institute, Metropolitan Museum of Art] .]

Reboux's business continued leadership under Mme. Lucienne after her death in 1927. The shop was well known for making the head-fitting felt cloche the status symbol of fashion for many years. The shop was famous for making hats that were noted for profile brims, dipping low on one side, forward-tilt tricorns, open-crown lamé turbans, and flower bandeaus. [ Calasibetta, p. 515 ]

References

Notes

Bibliography

* Adler, Betty, "Within the Year After", M.A. Donohue & Co. (1920), Original from the University of Michigan
* Calasibetta, Charlotte, "Fairchild's Dictionary of Fashion", Page 554 +, New York: Fairchild Publications, 1975.
* Callan, Georgina O'Hara, "The Thames and Hudson Dictionary of Fashion and Fashion Designers", New York: Thames and Hudson, 1998
* Dilys E. Blum. "Ahead of Fashion: Hats of the 20th Century." Philadelphia Museum of Art Bulletin, Vol. 89, No. 377/378, (Summer - Autumn, 1993), pp. 1-48
* Garland, Madge, "The Changing Form of Fashion", Dent (1970), Original from the University of Michigan
* Litoff, Judy Barrett et al, "European Immigrant Women in the United States: A Biographical Dictionary", Taylor & Francis (1994), ISBN 0-8240530-6-0
* Lambert, Eleanor, "World of Fashion. People, places, resources", New York: R.R. Bowker, 1976, ISBN 0-8352062-7-0.
* O'Hara, Georgina, "The Encyclopaedia of Fashion", New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1986, ISBN 0-8109088-2-4.
* Palmer, Alexandra, "Fashion: A Canadian Perspective", University of Toronto Press (2004), ISBN 0-8020859-0-3
* Red Hat Society et al, "Red Hat Society: red hats & the women who wear them.", Sterling Publishing Company, Inc. (2006), ISBN 1-5799099-4-9
* Shaw, Albert, "The American Monthly Review of Reviews", Review of Reviews (1898), Original from the University of Michigan
* Steele, Valerie, "Encyclopedia of clothing and fashion", Charles Scribner's Sons (2005), ISBN 0-6843139-4-4
* Steele, Valerie, "Paris Fashion: A Cultural History", Berg (1998), ISBN 1-8597397-3-3

Persondata
NAME = Caroline Reboux
ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
SHORT DESCRIPTION = fashion designer
DATE OF BIRTH = 1837
PLACE OF BIRTH = France
DATE OF DEATH = 1927
PLACE OF DEATH = France


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Caroline Reboux — Caroline Reboux, créatrice de mode française, née à Paris en 1837, décédée dans cette ville en 1927. Travaillant pour la haute couture naissante en France, elle a fait du chapeau un accessoire indispensable de la mode féminine et l a élevé au… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Reboux Et Muller — Paul Reboux Paul Reboux est le pseudonyme en littérature d André Amillet, né à Paris le 21 mai 1877 et décédé à Nice le 14 février 1963. Il est le fils de la célèbre modiste Caroline Reboux. Sommaire 1 Biographie 2 Autres activités 3 …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Reboux et Muller — Paul Reboux Paul Reboux est le pseudonyme en littérature d André Amillet, né à Paris le 21 mai 1877 et décédé à Nice le 14 février 1963. Il est le fils de la célèbre modiste Caroline Reboux. Sommaire 1 Biographie 2 Autres activités 3 …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Reboux et muller — Paul Reboux Paul Reboux est le pseudonyme en littérature d André Amillet, né à Paris le 21 mai 1877 et décédé à Nice le 14 février 1963. Il est le fils de la célèbre modiste Caroline Reboux. Sommaire 1 Biographie 2 Autres activités 3 …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Paul Reboux — Paul Reboux, nom de plume d André Amillet, est un écrivain français né à Paris le 21 mai 1877 et mort à Nice le 14 février 1963. Il est le fils de la célèbre modiste Caroline Reboux. Sommaire 1 Parcours 2 Œuvres 3 Q …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Lilly Daché — Infobox Person name = Lilly Dache image size = 200 px caption = Lilly Dache puts hat in 1938 Time Capsule birth name = birth date = 10 October 1898 birth place = Louveciennes, Yvelines, Île de France, France death date = 31 December 1989 death… …   Wikipedia

  • Cloche hat — Actress Vilma Bánky wearing a cloche hat, 1927 …   Wikipedia

  • Bibi Fricotin (Film) — Bibi Fricotin est un film français réalisé par Marcel Blistène en 1950 Sommaire 1 Synopsis 2 Fiche technique 3 Distribution 4 Lien externe …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Bibi Fricotin (film) — Bibi Fricotin est un film français réalisé par Marcel Blistène en 1950, sorti en 1951. Sommaire 1 Synopsis 2 Fiche technique 3 Distribution 4 Lien externe …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Bibi fricotin (film) — Bibi Fricotin est un film français réalisé par Marcel Blistène en 1950 Sommaire 1 Synopsis 2 Fiche technique 3 Distribution 4 Lien externe …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”