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Encyclopedia > House of Worth

The House of Worth is a leading English coutourist, created by Charles Frederick Worth (called the Father of Haute Couture).


Charles Worth was raised in Bourne, Lincolnshire, and apprenticed as a draper in London for six years at Swan and Edgars, which specialized in fine wools and silks. In 1845, at the age of twenty-one, he set out to find his fortune in Paris. He became an assistant draper at Maison Gagelin at 83 Rue Richelieu, where he was to remain for over ten years, rising to premier comis. His many innovations included the introduction of ready-made muslin dress samples from which patrons could choose a style; he would then match the choice to an appropriate fabric. He there met Marie Vernet, a demoiselle de maison whom he fell in love with very early on, but due to their limited incomes they did not marry until May 21st, 1851. This was just six weeks after the Great Exhibition began at the Crystal Palace in London. Maison Gagelin showed several of Worth's designs there and although they caused great consternation in their departure from current fashion Gagelin was awarded a gold medal for France.


Eventually a true dressmaking shop was added to the traditional drapers. Worth's designs were noted for their simplicity of line and also fabulous decoration, in the case of ball gowns and costume gowns. In the semi-fictional biography Banners of Silk by Rosalind Laker, a few gowns are discribed thusly:


"He gowned the Empress as Marie-Antoinette in rose velvet with head plumes a full metre high; as the wife of the Doge of Venice in black velvet and scarlet satin so covered with her magnificent diamonds that she sparkled from top to toe, and in many other oufits of similar grandeur."


Charles and Marie had two sons, Gaston and Jean-Phillipe. It was exhausting for Marie to live far away from her employers' and have the children cared for by hired help. When rooms became available above the Gagelin premises the Worths approached the partners of the firm desiring to rent them but were turned down on the grounds the a premiere comis could not live above the store like a common shopkeeper. Frustrated by their snobbery, this was the catalyst that eventually led to Worth opening his own gallery at 7 Rue de las Paix in 1858.


External Links

  • Charles Worth and the House of Worth (http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/wrth/hd_wrth.htm)

  Results from FactBites:
 
House of Worth - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (423 words)
The House of Worth is a leading English coutourist, created by Charles Frederick Worth (called the Father of Haute Couture).
Charles Worth was raised in Bourne, Lincolnshire, and apprenticed as a draper in London for six years at Swan and Edgars, which specialized in fine wools and silks.
Worth's designs were noted for their simplicity of line and also fabulous decoration, in the case of ball gowns and costume gowns.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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