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Our blog features our picks of the freshest vintage items, member news and articles. We have also created a growing series of articles on some classic designers.
The Vintage Fashion Guild™ (VFG) is an international organization dedicated to the promotion and preservation of vintage fashion.
The Vintage Fashion Guild™ (VFG) is an international community of people with expertise in vintage fashion. VFG members enjoy a wealth of resources, avenues for promoting their shops and specialties, and camaraderie with others who share a common interest and passion.
Hubert de Givenchy (1927 – 2018) started his fashion career in 1945 with Lucien Lelong. He also trained with Robert Piguet, Jacques Fath, and Schiaparelli before he opened his own house in 1952. He was only 25 years old.
Givenchy was a great admirer of Balenciaga, with whom he had a very close personal and professional relationship. They influenced each other’s work, as is evidenced in the development of the sack dress in the late 1950s.
Starting in 1954 with the movie Sabrina, he designed for Audrey Hepburn and he continued to design for her throughout her career. The story is that Hepburn went to Givenchy’s couture house, looking for some dresses to wear in Sabrina. Upon hearing that Miss Hepburn was in the house, Givenchy assumed that the visitor was Katherine Hepburn. He was so busy preparing for his upcoming show, that he told her he could not design the outfits, but that she was welcome to look through the racks of clothing left over from a previous show. The clothes Audrey Hepburn selected went on to win a Best Designer Oscar (though the award went to Edith Head, as the official designer of the movie) and Hepburn and Givenchy went on to become the best of friends.
Givenchy did licenses early on in his career. He designed 23 Orlon sweaters for Talbott in 1955 and they were introduced at his spring 1955 Paris collection. In 1968 Givenchy started a ready-to-wear line, Givenchy Nouvelle Boutique. In the late 1970s, his Givenchy Sport line was widely worn on the Charlie’s Angels TV program.
Givenchy retired in 1996. John Galliano became head designer at the House of Givenchy, but the next year he was replaced by Alexander McQueen. In 2001, Julien Macdonald became head designer. His last collection for Givenchy was Fall 2004. Riccardo Tisci was named the new designer in March, 2005, with his first collection presented for Spring 2006. In 2017, Clare Waight Keller became the house’s first woman head designer.
Written by fuzzylizzie
See vintage Givenchy from VFG members on Etsy (paid link)
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from an early 1950s dress
from an early-1950s hat
from a 1958 couture dress
from a 1950s dress
from a 1950s hat
from a 1955 sweater
from a 1950s wool tweed coat
from a late 1950s / early 1960s tie
from a c. 1962 coat
from a 1960s couture dress
from a 1960s silk scarf
from a 1960s/70s tie
c 1965;NOT from Givenchy;prob from Korean tailor
from a late 1960s couture pants set
Look carefully for handwritten numbers
from a 1970s couture coat
from a 1973 shirt
from a 1970s pair of shoes
from a 1970s jacket
from a 1970s blouse
from a 1970s logo sweater
from a late 1970s/early 1980s dress
from a 1980s dress
from a 1980s nightgown
from a 1980s day dress
from a 1980s coat
from a 1980s couture jacket
from a 1980s demi-couture skirt suit
from a 1980s tie
from a mid 1980s jacket
from a late 1980s/early 1990s swimsuit
from a 1990s evening mini
from a late 1990s pleated skirt