debutanteclothing
VFG Board Member
Hi everyone! I'm Sandra Mendoza. I've corresponded with some of you many times. I am a complete and utter newbie so please excuse me as I figure this all out. I chose Alix Gres because I actually found a Gres skirt, the modern label, and while doing my own research, I found her quite interesting. Most of my workshop will be a brief history, important aspects of Gres and many picutres. I hope you enjoy it.
Madame Grès<br>
<img src="http://www.designerhistory.com/historyofashion/images/gres.jpg">
Madame Alix Gres was actually born Germaine Emilie Krebs in Paris,
1903. She began as a sculptor, but never had a fruitful
career. Frustrated, she began to design toiles for a design house
in Paris. That's when she decided to try her hand at fashion
design.
She opened her first house under the name Alix Barton. She
designed silk jersey dresses with simple lines and draping, and began
gaining some publicity in fashion magazines. Her house was simply
named "Alix".
She felt that the true job of the couturier was not create a name for
him/herself, as many designers do, but to pay rigorous attention to the
clothing.
<img alt="" src="http://members.sparedollar.com/fuzzylizzie/wsalix1.jpg">
Her training as a sculptor influenced her clothing designs. She
once created a dress modeled after the Louvre's Nike of Samothrace. Alix
created many of her gowns from silk jersey which she draped and pleated
and cut on the bias.
Madame Gres used live mannequins when designing her gowns. She
would take pieces of fabric and drape and pleat them right on the
models.
<img alt="" src="http://members.sparedollar.com/fuzzylizzie/wsalix3.jpg">
From these pictures, you can see the simplicity of the lines in her
earlier work, but how well it contoured the woman's body. They
were sophisticated, clean, clung in the right places, and always
elegant. The wrapped dresses show her Greco-roman sculpture
influence.
In the late 30s, she married Serge Czerefkov, sold the rights to the
name Alix and adopted Gres from her husband's first name, spelled
backwards.
<img alt="" src="http://members.sparedollar.com/fuzzylizzie/wsalix4.jpg">
Next, the war....
I will post the next segment between 10am and 12pm PST, but will be online to answer any questions.
Madame Grès<br>
<img src="http://www.designerhistory.com/historyofashion/images/gres.jpg">
Madame Alix Gres was actually born Germaine Emilie Krebs in Paris,
1903. She began as a sculptor, but never had a fruitful
career. Frustrated, she began to design toiles for a design house
in Paris. That's when she decided to try her hand at fashion
design.
She opened her first house under the name Alix Barton. She
designed silk jersey dresses with simple lines and draping, and began
gaining some publicity in fashion magazines. Her house was simply
named "Alix".
She felt that the true job of the couturier was not create a name for
him/herself, as many designers do, but to pay rigorous attention to the
clothing.
<img alt="" src="http://members.sparedollar.com/fuzzylizzie/wsalix1.jpg">
Her training as a sculptor influenced her clothing designs. She
once created a dress modeled after the Louvre's Nike of Samothrace. Alix
created many of her gowns from silk jersey which she draped and pleated
and cut on the bias.
Madame Gres used live mannequins when designing her gowns. She
would take pieces of fabric and drape and pleat them right on the
models.
<img alt="" src="http://members.sparedollar.com/fuzzylizzie/wsalix3.jpg">
From these pictures, you can see the simplicity of the lines in her
earlier work, but how well it contoured the woman's body. They
were sophisticated, clean, clung in the right places, and always
elegant. The wrapped dresses show her Greco-roman sculpture
influence.
In the late 30s, she married Serge Czerefkov, sold the rights to the
name Alix and adopted Gres from her husband's first name, spelled
backwards.
<img alt="" src="http://members.sparedollar.com/fuzzylizzie/wsalix4.jpg">
Next, the war....
I will post the next segment between 10am and 12pm PST, but will be online to answer any questions.