Author: April Calahan

  • Hattie Carnegie: The Big Business of High Fashion

    Born in 1886 in Vienna, Austria, the petite (4″ 10′) dynamo, Henrietta Kanengeiser would grow up to become one of the leading figures in American fashion for more than four decades.  After a fire destroyed their Vienna home in 1892, Henrietta’s family relocated to the Lower East Side of New York City—Henrietta the second of…

  • The Nina Hyde Collection: an interview with Vionnet, age 98

    Madeleine Vionnet and fashion journalist Nina Hyde with the miniature mannequin used by the designer to drape her toiles in the round, 1974. Culling through the collection a few weeks ago in preparation for a patron researching Madeleine Vionnet, I was delighted to find Nina Hyde’s original notes from a 1974 interview with the renowned…

  • Capturing Cool: the Jamel Shabazz photographs

    Only recently was I lamenting the dearth of street fashion photography in our collection to a colleague, when we were put in touch with the visionary street and fashion photographer, Jamel Shabazz.  It took us about a millisecond to ponder his query:  ‘Would we be interested in receiving a donation of some of his photographs?’ …

  • Hot Accession! Eva: The Journal of Educated Women

    Hot Accession!  Eva: The Journal of Educated Women

    Everyone’s who’s been happening through the department recently has had plenty to say about our new accession, Eva.  The Czech-language magazine marketed to “educated women” was first issued in 1928 and is simply smart, chic and drop dead gorgeous.  We’re happy to report we have nearly the full-run of the title, lacking only the first…

  • A Victorian Fashion History Mystery…

             From time to time, we come across beautiful items in our collection that cause us to stop, take note, and delve more into their history.  These dainty and diminutive sketches of Victorian millinery may have been executed by Auguste Félix, or the designs of a milliner of that same name, for…

  • Steichen & Poiret: the first fashion photographs?

    Many scholars cite the emergence of modern fashion photography to the April 1911 issue of Art et Decoration, which features the designs of couturier Paul Poiret as photographed by famed photographer Edward Steichen. Certainly, these images are not the earliest fashion photographs—our department contains examples from La Mode Pratique dating to 1892—but the presentation of garments…

  • Bare Beauties

    Bare Beauties

    During the 1920s, publishers circumvented the laws concerning the publication of nude photos by ostensibly purposing them “FOR ARTISTS ONLY.” “While this magazine is of general interest, particular stress is laid upon the fine arts and crafts; and an especial appeal is made to artists, designers, architects, drawing teachers, photographers, art supervisors, curators of museums,…

  • Muriel King and Gone With the Wind

    Keren Ben-Horin’s recent post on one of our favorite blogs, ON PINS AND NEEDLES, has inspired us to speak about a little more about the American couturière Muriel King and her work in Hollywood. King established a successful couture house in New York City during the early 1930s—at the height of the Great Depression.  Her clients included…

  • The Muppet Show Style Book

    One of the staff favorites in the department isn’t necessarily due to its precious nature, but rather its nostalgia… The Muppet Show Style Book was created in 1979, three years after the launch of  popular television show, by Jim Henson & Associates, Inc.: “This book of style sheets and character personality descriptions has been compiled to…

  • Fashion Designers A-Z: The Collection of The Museum at FIT

    The much anticipated publication featuring highlights from The Museum at FIT’s costume collection is finally here!  Published by Taschen, with a forward by Suzy Menkes, and text by The Museum at FIT’s Director Valerie Steele, the initial copies of the title are gorgeous limited-editions housed in lucite display cases.  Six ‘Designer Editions’ are available, featuring…