The VFG believes that informed selling and buying communities are good for the vintage-fashion industry as a whole, and all visitors to the website have access to the VFG resources. These are continually updated and constantly evolving, thanks to a dedicated volunteer staff.
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.
Jeff Banks started London boutique ‘Clobber’ with business partner Tony Harley in 1964. It began as a retail outlet, supplied by designers such as Ossie Clark, Janice Wainwright and Jean Muir for Jane and Jane. Clobber was the forerunner of Biba; with its intimate, stylish feel. Banks turned designer when the shop regularly sold out of its stock. “The day after we opened we were standing in the empty shop and Freda Fairway, who had worked for Hardy Amies and Mary Quant, came into the shop and said, ‘Why don’t you make your own clothes?’ There was nothing she didn’t know about making clothes. She stayed with me seventeen years.”
His clothes were also sold in Fenwicks in the 1960s and 1970s. He married Sandie Shaw in 1968 and they had a daughter, Grace, before divorcing in the 1970s. He moved into mass retailing with his ‘Warehouse’ chain in the 1970s. He later became most famous for working on BBC’s The Clothes Show and is still designing clothes and homewares, and co-running Graduate Fashion Week in the UK.
See also: Clobber
Written by emmepeelpants
Courtesy of emmapeelpants
from a 1970s fitted blouse