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Not Even Past NOT EVEN PAST The past is never dead. It's not even past NOT EVEN PAST Search the site ... Carrie Marcus Neiman – A Pioneer in Ready to Wear Like 27 Tweet By Lynn Mally Neiman Marcus building from a postcard circa 1920 The Neiman Marcus store, which opened in Dallas Texas in 1907, was founded on a revolutionary idea—that ready-to-wear clothing for women could be as well made as couture garments. At the start of the twentieth century, women who had the means to do so bought custom made clothing. The three founders—Herbert Marcus, Albert Neiman, and Carrie Marcus Neiman (wife of Albert, sister of Herbert) sought to change those patterns of consumption. It was Carrie and her colleague Moira Cullen who did the most to make the Neiman Marcus experiment a success. They were the buyers for the store; when they didn’t nd merchandise that met their high standards, they had it made. As Stanley Marcus wrote in his memoir, Minding the Store, “They were creators of a style, a Neiman-Marcus style, which they accomplished by fabric substitution, ‘always for the better’; by the replacement of garish buttons, pins, and belt buckles with simpler ornamentation; by insisting on handsewn linings, deeper hems, and subtle colors.”(62) Privacy - Terms Carrie Marcus Neiman, from Stanley Marcus Minding the Store At work Carrie Neiman wore a kind of uniform, a black outt with pearls and two gold bracelets on one wrist. You can see the basics here in this 1948 photo, taken when she was around sixty-ve. Her clothes outside of work must have sometimes been more colorful. After she died her family donated 200 items from her closet, which became the basis of the some 200 became the basis for the Texas Fashion Collection at the University of North Texas. You can browse the collection on line. It has many a dark dress, but also a burnt orange Chanel suit and a metallic green dress and coat combination by Bonnie Cashin. How tting that she bought not only from Parisian designers, but also from Americans known for their outstanding ready to wear clothes. She had paved the way for them. Original post on American Age Fashion. You may also like in Texas History: Confederados: The Texans of Brazil “The Battle of Bandera Pass and the Making of Lone Star Legend” A Texas Ranger and the Letter of the Law “The Die is Cast”: Early Texans Face the Comanches Standard Oil writes a “history” of the old south Stephen F. Austin visits a New Orleans bookstore Posted March 25, 2015 More Texas 19th century 20th Century African American History american history Asia Asia & Middle East book review Brazil British Empire China Civil War Cold War Colonialism communism cultural history digital history Early Modern Europe Europe lm gender history History of Science immigration India Islam Latin America Latin American History Mexico Not Even Past Public History race religion Russia slavery Texas Texas History Texas History Day Transnational Twentieth Century History United States US History USSR Womens History world history World War II NOT EVEN PAST is produced by The Department of History THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN We are supported by the College of Liberal Arts And our READERS DONATE CONTACT All content © 2010-present NOT EVEN PAST and the authors, unless otherwise noted Sign up to receive the monthly Not Even Past newsletter Your email address SUBSCRIBE FEATURES BOOKS TEACHING DIGITAL & FILM BLOG IHS & PUBLIC HISTORY TEXAS ABOUT.
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