Featured designers

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Featured designers

Fashion Rules spans four decades of recent fashion and features 10 notable designers who had the privilege and the challenge of dressing these royal women in their fashion heydays.

(Pictured right: HM The Queen visits the German Embassy in a Norman Hartnell gown. Photo: Getty Images)
HM The Queen at the German Embassy in a Norman Hartnell gown. Photo: Getty Images

Norman Hartnell evening gown, worn by HM The Queen, early 1950sNorman Hartnell

Sir Norman Hartnell (1901–1979) set up his own label in 1932, employing 550 people in the 1950s in-house and thousands more in ancillary trades. He was known for his opulent yet elegant designs, lavishly adorned embroidery, and use of intricate details. His career spanned six decades.

Hartnell designed many important gowns for the royal family including the wedding dresses of The Queen and Princess Margaret and the coronation dress and robes. His design for Queen Elizabeth’s wedding dress in 1947 featured a fashionable sweetheart neckline and softly folding full skirt, embroidered with 10,000 seed-pearls and thousands of white beads. His summer 1953 collection of some 150 designs was named The Silver and Gold Collection.

Together with Hardy Amies, Hartnell shared the large task of creating wardrobes for The Queen’s many state visits, royal tours abroad and numerous events at home.




Hardy Amies gown worn by HM The Queen to Nova Scotia, 1959Hardy Amies

Sir Edwin Hardy Amies (1909–2003) established his own couture fashion house business in Savile Row in 1946. He became known for his classic and beautifully tailored clothes for both men and women.

During the Second World War, together with other leading designers including Norman Hartnell, Hardy Amies designed for the CC41 scheme (Civilian Clothing 1941), a government-led initiative to produce elegant, fashionable designs which complied to rationing restrictions. Amies' association with the Queen began in 1950 and he was awarded a Royal Warrant as official dressmaker in 1955.

In 1977 he designed the gown for Queen Elizabeth's Silver Jubilee portrait, which he said was "immortalised on a thousand biscuit tins." 



Ian Thomas dress worn by HM The Queen, 1970Ian Thomas

Ian Thomas (1929–1993) worked from 1952 as an assistant designer at Norman Hartnell. Thomas assisted with the work on the Coronation robes which featured intricate embroidery, a tradition of the house, which was to be continued by Thomas in his own business.

Thomas stayed at Hartnell for 17 years, leaving to start his own couture business in Lowndes Street, Belgravia, in 1969. Under his own label he dressed many members of the Royal Family, notably the Queen, for whom he made both day wear and grand-occasion clothes. He was known for his restrained elegance and the relaxed style of his flowing chiffon dresses, which captured the more fluid fashions of the 1970s.




Marc Bohan for Christian Dior dress. Photo: Historic Royal Palaces / Robin ForsterMarc Bohan

Marc Bohan (1926- ) was chief designer for 30 years at the house of Dior. In 1961, he presented his first collection under the Dior label entitled ‘Slim Look’. Bohan's collection was inspired by the straighter silhouette of the 1920s, and was a bold departure from the popular hour-glass shaped designs of the 1950s. Bohan designed for many famously elegant women including Princess Grace of Monaco, Brigit Bardot, Jackie Kennedy and Princess Margaret. Some of his most widely influential pieces were from his 1966 collection which featured garments based on the film Doctor Zhivago.

"N'oubliez pas la femme," his comment in a 1963 Vogue magazine, is the tenet which underscored all of Bohan’s work. His designs were always based on the adult female form and a recognition of his customers' needs rather than a desire to shock and provoke headlines in his name.

He left Dior in 1989 and worked for another royal instition, the House of Hartnell, until 1992.




Carl Toms kaftan worn by Princess Margaret, 1976Carl Toms

Carl Toms OBE (1927–1999) assisted Norman Hartnell in the design of Princess Margaret’s wedding dress in 1960 but was better known for his set designs and costumes for the theatre and opera. In 1960 he designed the world premiere of Benjamin Britten's opera A Midsummer Night's Dream at the Aldeburgh Festival. He then worked with the Old Vic, English Stage Company andthe National Theatre on various productions.

He had commissions to redecorate several West End theatres including the Theatre Royal, Windsor, and, most notably, the Theatre Royal, Bath, which he restored to its former glory in 1982.

Diana, Princess of Wales in a Jacques Azagury dress. Photo: Tim Graham / Getty Images Jacques Azagury

Moroccan-born Jacques Azagury (1958- ) opened his own shop in Knightsbridge, London in 1987. He specialises in cocktail and special occasion wear for private clients, and also sells pieces to other fashion shops and top couture retailers throughout the UK. His sister, Elizabeth, runs her floristry business, Azagury Fleurs, from the basement of the shop. His brother's shoe design label, Joseph Azagury, is nearby.

His clothes were great favourites with Diana, Princess of Wales. His first dress for her was a 1920's style ballgown worn in the mid-80's. 




Diana, Princess of Wales in a Murray Arbeid gown. Photo: Nils Jorgensen / Rex FeaturesMurray Arbeid

Murray Arbeid (1935–2011) was renowned for his floor-sweeping, show-stopping evening gowns. 'Others do day clothes better,' he once said, 'so let them get on with it.'

In the 1980s Diana, Princess of Wales, had a number of evening dresses made by Murray Arbeid; two of them were among 80 of the Princess's dresses sold at a charity auction in 1997 at Christies, New York.

Arbeid also had a considerable wholesale business, selling his clothes to stores such as Harrods and Harvey Nichols. He showed his collections in Paris, Düsseldorf and Tokyo, but it was in the United States that he was particularly feted. Other clients included Queen Noor of Jordan, Estée Lauder and Dame Shirley Bassey. In 1988 he was appointed design director for the House of Hartnell in London and he retired in 1992.




Zandra Rhodes dress, 1986. Photo: Historic Royal Palaces / Robin ForsterZandra Rhodes

Zandra Rhodes CBE (1940- ) graduated from the Royal College of Art in 1964 where her major area of study was printed textile design. Her early textile designs were considered too outrageous by the traditional British manufacturers so she manufactured dresses from her own fabrics. She was influenced by Emilio Pucci, Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein. She opened her first shop in 1967 with Sylvia Ayton.

Rhodes’ designs are considered clear, creative statements, dramatic but graceful, bold but feminine. Her inspiration comes from organic material and nature. She was Designer of the Year in 1972 and in 1974 Royal Designer for Industry. In 1977 she launched the pink and black jersey collection with holes and beaded safety pins that earned her the nickname “Princess of Punk”.  She set up the Fashion and Textile Museum in Bermondsey, London which officially opened in May 2003. 




Bruce Oldfield dress, 1986

Bruce Oldfield

Bruce Oldfield OBE (1950- ) launched his couture line in 1978. He opened his first London boutique in 1984 to sell both his ready-to-wear and couture designs. In 1986 and 1988 he organised the Bruce Oldfield for Barnardo's gala evenings, at London's Grosvenor House ballroom, which were attended by Diana, Princess of Wales. 

His 10-year fashion relationship with Diana, Princess of Wales started in 1980 when he started creating couture gowns for her. He once described designing for the princess as "dressing a young woman who, to an extent, was relying on us to steer her straight, knowing we wouldn't let her down." Oldfield uses sumptuous fabrics like crushed velvets, taffeta, mink, printed sequins, crêpe, chiffon and lame to design traditional sculpted shapes that are exquisitely manufactured.

Particularly distinctive is Oldfield's use of color blocking; simple jersey dresses are slashed asymmetrically and blocked in various vivid colour combinations. His tailoring is always curvaceous and womanly, with seams and darts placed to flatter the feminine physique.




Catherine Walker dress worn by Diana, Princess of Wales. Photo: Tim Graham / Getty ImagesCatherine Walker

Catherine Walker (1945–2010) was a French-born, self-taught fashion designer based in London. She was noted for having supplied over 1,000 outfits for Diana, Princess of Wales. As her reputation grew by word of mouth, she attracted press attention, and British Vogue first photographed one of her dresses in January 1982.

Walker was renowned for her dislike of publicity and never held a catwalk show. It is her tailoring, use of plain colours such as black, navy, cream, and red, and applied decoration such as hand-embroidery, heavy beading, and frogging (military style embroidery) that have become the hallmarks of Walker's designs. There is always an emphasis on the midriff, which Walker attributes to her French background.

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