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  2. Robe de style - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robe_de_style

    A robe de style dress by couturier Jeanne Lanvin, c. 1926–27. The robe de style describes a style of dress popular in the 1920s as an alternative to the straight-cut chemise dress. The style was characterised by its full skirts. The bodice could be fitted, or straight-cut in the chemise manner, with a dropped waist, but it was the full skirt ...

  3. 1920s in Western fashion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1920s_in_Western_fashion

    1920s in Western fashion. Actors Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford on board the SS Lapland on their honeymoon, 1920. A drawing picturing French women's fashion, c.1921. Typical fashion in California, 1925. Tennis player, Australia, 1924. Western fashion in the 1920s underwent a modernization. Women's fashion continued to evolve from the ...

  4. Nell Donnelly Reed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nell_Donnelly_Reed

    Nell was born Ellen Quinlan in Parsons, Kansas, the twelfth child of an Irish immigrant railroad worker and his wife. [2] She attended Parsons High School, and following graduation, worked as a stenographer in Kansas City where, aged 17, she married a tenant of a boarding-house adjoining her own, Paul Donnelly, who became the Credit Manager of the Barton Shoe Co. [3] Donnelly supported her by ...

  5. Ann Lowe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ann_Lowe

    1919–1972. Known for. Wedding dress of Jacqueline Bouvier. Children. 2. Ann Cole Lowe (December 14, 1898 – February 25, 1981) was an American fashion designer. Best known for designing the ivory silk taffeta wedding dress worn by Jacqueline Bouvier when she married John F. Kennedy in 1953, she was the first African American to become a ...

  6. Feed sack dress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feed_sack_dress

    Feed sack dress. Feed sack dresses, flour sack dresses, or feedsack dresses were a common article of clothing in rural US and Canadian communities from the late 19th century through the mid 20th century. They were made at home, usually by women, using the cotton sacks in which flour, sugar, animal feed, seeds, and other commodities were ...

  7. Jacques Doucet (fashion designer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacques_Doucet_(fashion...

    Doucet was a designer of taste and discrimination who valued dignity and luxury above novelty and practicality, and gradually faded from popularity during the 1920s. A collection of dresses from 1923. Several years after World War I, in 1927, Cubists Joseph Csaky, Jacques Lipchitz, Louis Marcoussis, Henri Laurens, the sculptor Gustave Miklos ...

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