Clare Potter

Clare Potter
Clare Potter
Born July 7, 1903(1903-07-07)
Jersey City, New Jersey
Died January 5, 1999(1999-01-05)
Fort Ann, New York
Nationality American
Education Art Students League of New York and Pratt Institute of Design
Occupation Fashion designer
Awards 1937 Lord and Taylor Women's Sportswear Award, 1939 Neiman Marcus Fashion Award, 1946 Coty Award

Clare Potter was a fashion designer who was born in Jersey City, New Jersey in 1903. In the 1930s she was one of the first American fashion designers to be promoted as an individual design talent.[1] She has been credited as one of the inventors of American sportswear.[2] Based in Manhattan, she continued designing through the 1940s and 1950s. Her clothes were renowned for being elegant, but easy-to-wear and relaxed, and for their distinctive use of colour.[1] She founded a ready-to-wear fashion company in Manhattan named Timbertop in 1948, and in the 1960s she also established a wholesale company to manufacture fashions. Potter was one of the seventeen women gathered together by Edna Woolman Chase, editor-in-chief of Vogue to form the Fashion Group International, Inc., in 1928.[3]

Contents

Early life and education

Born Clare Meyer in Jersey City, just across the Hudson River from Manhattan, she studied at the Art Students League of New York and began her studies at the Pratt Institute of Design in fine arts. After seeing clothes that Potter designed and made for herself, the director of the Pratt Institute recommended that she study costume design.[1]

Before her graduation she left Pratt to work for Edward L. Mayer, a wholesale dress manufacturer in Manhattan, where she spent three years developing her skills and designing mid-market sportswear.[1]

Career

Following a six-month hiatus in Mexico, Potter returned to Manhattan in 1930 and gained employment with the ready to wear firm of Charles W. Nudelman Inc. on Seventh Avenue, a manufacturer who specialized in affordable, good-quality ready-to-wear fashion.

Unusually, at a time when designers for large companies were not acknowledged by name, Clare Potter was promoted as a named designer by Dorothy Shaver, then vice-president of Lord & Taylor department store which was headquartered on Fifth Avenue,[1] who would become its first woman president.[4] Potter was one of the first American designers to achieve such name recognition.[2]

In 1936, Potter was featured alongside Elizabeth Hawes and Muriel King in the second Lord & Taylor "American Look" promotion which championed home-grown American design talent.[1][5] She was awarded the first Lord & Taylor Design Award in 1938 for distinguished designing in the field of sportswear for women.[1]

Potter was a keen sportswoman who particularly enjoyed horseback riding.[2] She designed for women like herself, saying in 1948:

"Large numbers of American women want clothes that are refined. I aim to give them in a medium-priced, ready-to-wear costume what they would find in custom-made styles."[6]
Eleanor Roosevelt (centre) wears a Clare Potter dress to meet King George VI & Queen Elizabeth in London, October 23, 1942.

During the 1940s, well-known Potter designs included the two-piece bathing suit consisting of separate small top and bloomers, a sweater designed for evening wear, and a sidesaddle-draped skirt. Examples of these designs were featured in the 1998-1999 exhibition Designing Women: American Style 1940-1960 at the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford, Connecticut.[7] Her use of colour was distinctive, with one 1940s evening outfit consisting of a pink blouse, green belt, and pale blue skirt.[2] Other designs were made up in one single, unique shade, such as the blue wool dress worn by Eleanor Roosevelt to meet George VI and his queen consort, Elizabeth in London, October 23, 1942.[7] Roosevelt had been a fellow founder with Potter and others, of an association of women interested in advancing elegant and fashionable clothing for women, the Fashion Group International, FGI.[3][8] In 1946, Potter was awarded a Coty Award for her casual clothes and her distinctive use of colour.[1]

In 1948, Potter launched a ready-to-wear company called Timbertop, with a former magazine editor, Martha Stout. The company shared its name with the turkey farm in West Nyack where Potter and her husband, architect J. Sanford Potter, lived. They had married about 1930.[2]

Later life

By the mid-1950s Clare Potter worked independently from a barn on her farm. Her business became a husband-and-wife concern, with J. Sanford Potter assisting by drafting her clothing patterns.[2]

In the late 1950s the Potters moved into a Japanese-style house on Lake Nebo in Fort Ann, New York that was designed and built by J. Sanford.[2] In addition to their professional work, they bred Dalmatian dogs, grew camellias, and enjoyed riding and hunting.[2][7] They kept their horses in Virginia, where the local hunt clubs enjoyed a long season.

J. Sanford Potter died in 1994 and, at the age of 95, Clare Potter died in 1999 at their home in Fort Ann. They left no surviving family.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Notable American Women: A Biographical Dictionary. Harvard University Press. 2004. ISBN 9780674014886. 
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Schiro, Anne-Marie, Clare Potter, Who Set Trends In Women's Clothes, Dies at 95 New York Times, January 11, 1999
  3. ^ a b History of the Fashion Group International
  4. ^ http://americanhistory.si.edu/archives/AC0631.htm
  5. ^ Hawes, Elizabeth (1938). Fashion Is Spinach. Random House. pp. Chapter 15. 
  6. ^ Interview to the New York Times in 1948, quoted by Schiro, Anne-Marie in Clare Potter, Who Set Trends In Women's Clothes, Dies at 95 New York Times, January 11, 1999
  7. ^ a b c Obituary in the LA Times, 12 January 1999
  8. ^ Overview of the Dorothy Shaver Archive, part of the Archives Center at the National Museum of American History

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