BOUTIQUE CHIC
at Horsham Museum
Runs until 30th April 2016
Noisy, dark and cramped.
No. Not Horsham
Museum. Boutiques.
I‘ve been
to see Horsham's current exhibition ‘Boutique Chic’.
Tucked away
upstairs in the museum in a quiet corner next to the sewing room and
accessories there is a gem of a gallery. A large
display case more of an attic room really, is imaginatively arranged to
suggest the essence of a fashion boutique of the 1960s. All vivid colours, styles
and patterns.
It contains two Laura Ashley dresses.This brand perfectly
captured the dreamy country milkmaid clothes with bibs and lace and long sashes
and they were quite quite different to the bright mini skirts.
The style looks older
than the 1960s, almost Edwardian, but this epitomises how ‘60s fashion was
being split in many directions.
A trend that has never really gone away.
And the young assistants wore the fab clothes
the shops sold.
And they
didn’t call you madam.
New designers meant new fabrics made into young bright
colourful clothes, styled in mini,midi or maxi lengths. Unlined clothes
underlined the cheap fast production methods that got goods into the shop the
minute they were made. Stories were told of dresses being run up in one place
and gathered up in an assistant’s arms and run along the street to the next
door boutique and straight on the racks.
Horsham’s exhibition
showcases the BIG trends of the sixties.
Wet Look
fabric.
PVC Macs with
welded seams.
Psychedelic
patterns.
Short skirts.
Long dresses.
Button up
the front skirts.
Waistcoat
and skirt suits.
Brands like
Dollyrockers and Mary Quant Ginger Group.
Pucci and
Vogue are represented too
The proof that the 60s freedoms in dress went up the age groups as well as down, was a Jean Allen metallic gold lace mini cocktail dress. Teenager style for those old enough to drink.
It is just visible in this photo beside a snappy red wet look waistcoat and mini skirt.
I thought
how the blue wrap over Mary Quant Ginger Group dress with its short puffy
sleeves looked very 1980s and how the 1930s influence was represented by the
purple satin Biba midi dress.
Looking at
these with an older perspective, I was surprised to see how many of the clothes
were dry clean only. In 1968 a mans suit cost roughly 10/6 (52p) to be dry cleaned.
And as a shop assistant would be earning approx. £4 a week, it meant you had to
take very good care of your clothes.
And
finally.
There they
were, hung up near the back.
Silver mesh
stockings.
I had a
pair of those.
Felt
groovy. Looked mod.
Itched like
mad.
And on
mature reflection, pairing them with green platform heels might have been a
mistake……..
A museum
well worth a visit.
My grateful
thanks to Jeremy Knight and Horsham Museum for permission to use the
photographs.
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