Current:Home > NewsMary Quant, fashion designer who styled the Swinging Sixties, dies at 93 -TradeWise
Mary Quant, fashion designer who styled the Swinging Sixties, dies at 93
View
Date:2025-04-18 14:17:32
Fashion designer Dame Mary Quant has died at her home in Surrey, UK, according to her family. She was 93.
Synonymous with the Swinging Sixties in London, she helped make hot pants, miniskirts and Vidal Sassoon bobs essential to the era's look. While still in her 20s, Quant opened an influential shop on Kings Road that evolved into a global fashion brand.
The daughter of Welsh schoolteachers in London, Quant was fascinated by fashion at an early age. Even as a child during World War II, she found the drab conventions around children's garments stifling.
"I didn't like clothes the way they were. I didn't like the clothes I inherited from a cousin. They weren't me," Quant explained in a 1985 interview on Thames TV. What she liked, she said, was the style of a young girl in her dancing class. "She was very complete. And her look! It's always been in my head. Black tights. White ankle socks... and black patent leather shoes with a button on top. The skirt was minutely short."
Quant's parents did not approve of fashion as a vocation, so she attended art school at Goldsmiths College, studied illustration and met and married an aristocratic fellow student, Alexander Plunket Greene. With partner Archie McNair, they opened a business in Chelsea in 1955, already stirring with what would become the "Youthquake" of the 1960s.
A self-taught designer, Quant wanted to make playful clothes for young modern women they could wear to work and "run to the bus in," as she put it. That meant flats, candy-colored tights, dresses with pockets, Peter Pan collars, knickerbockers, and above all, mini skirts.
"Because the Chelsea girl — she had the best legs in the world, " Quant declared in the Thames TV interview. "She wanted the short skirts, the elongated cardigan."
Quant helped elevate several of the era's top British models – Jean Shrimpton and Twiggy – and developed a line of makeup inspired partly by their unconventional application techniques, such as using blush on their lids. And she included an innovation of her own: waterproof mascara. Notably, she also hired Black models at a time when diversity was unusual in magazines and on runaways.
"She was one of the first female fashion designers to build an entire brand around her name," said John Campbell McMillian, a history professor who studies the 1960s. Quant, he notes, helped kick off the careers of photographer Brian Duffy, designer Caroline Charles and legendary Rolling Stones manager Andrew Loog Oldham, who had an early job as a shop assistant for Quant. "People who worked for her talked about how fun she was to be around, even as they worked at a blazing pace."
While Quant's brand never became as massive as Ralph Lauren or Gloria Vanderbilt, her partnership with JCPenney in the 1960s reflected her interest in affordable, accessible fashion. Her influence endures, with recent retrospectives dedicated to her work at the Victoria and Albert Museum and the Taipei Fine Arts Museum in Taiwan. And Mary Quant was the subject of an affectionate 2021 documentary directed by movie star Sadie Frost.
veryGood! (74861)
Related
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- Scientists Are Pursuing Flood-Resistant Crops, Thanks to Climate-Induced Heavy Rains and Other Extreme Weather
- Get Your Skincare Routine Ready for Summer With This $12 Ice Roller That Shoppers Say Feels Amazing
- Proponents Say Storing Captured Carbon Underground Is Safe, But States Are Transferring Long-Term Liability for Such Projects to the Public
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Climate Change Remains a Partisan Issue in Georgia Elections
- The debt ceiling deadline, German economy, and happy workers
- Blast Off With These Secrets About Apollo 13
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- SpaceX wants this supersized rocket to fly. But will investors send it to the Moon?
Ranking
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- California Water Regulators Still Haven’t Considered the Growing Body of Research on the Risks of Oil Field Wastewater
- Shop These American-Made Brands This 4th of July Weekend from KitchenAid to Glossier
- College Acceptance: Check. Paying For It: A Big Question Mark.
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- Nearly a third of nurses nationwide say they are likely to leave the profession
- Natural Gas Samples Taken from Boston-Area Homes Contained Numerous Toxic Compounds, a New Harvard Study Finds
- An Unprecedented Heat Wave in India and Pakistan Is Putting the Lives of More Than a Billion People at Risk
Recommendation
US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
He's trying to fix the IRS and has $80 billion to play with. This is his plan
SVB, now First Republic: How it all started
McDonald's franchises face more than $200,000 in fines for child-labor law violations
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
Oil Industry Moves to Overturn Historic California Drilling Protection Law
In Jacobabad, One of the Hottest Cities on the Planet, a Heat Wave Is Pushing the Limits of Human Livability
In An Unusual Step, a Top Medical Journal Weighs in on Climate Change