In the aftermath of the Second World War, the fashion departments of London’s West End department stores were not only challenged by austerity and bomb damage but also by the growth of multiple retailers selling branded ready-to-wear goods. This article investigates how department stores responded by investing in display and visual merchandising to attract custom and rebuild their fashionable reputations. It argues that the difficulties caused by austerity conditions forced department stores to embrace new retail methodologies that helped them adapt to the changed circumstances of post-war fashion retail and compete with multiple retailers
In 1958 a new collaborative group of British ready-to-wear fashion houses was formed; The Fashion Ho...
From the end of World War II, British clothing retailers—most notably, Marks & Spencer (M&S)—increas...
Not only did World War II bring about changes to the economy and policy, it also changed women’s fas...
In the aftermath of the Second World War, the fashion departments of London’s West End department st...
The Second World War disrupted the usual networks and geographies of London fashion, changing the wa...
This paper will examine changes in the home market retail and distribution structure for British dre...
The critical impetus of this study is to explore the period between 1944 and 1951 on its own terms, ...
British fashion retailers emerged from the Second World War with severe stock shortages and shabby, ...
DRESSING DURING AUSTERITY This exhibition explores how men and women found new ways to dress as the ...
This study examines the creation and professionalisation of a recognisable English couture industry ...
© 2022 The Author. Published by the Marketing History Society of Japan. This is an open access artic...
This article investigates and compares how fashion reacted to the deprivations of the Second World W...
This article explores 1940’s fashion. Much has been documented about the huge influence Dior’s 1947 ...
Glamorous, ostentatious, extravagant, alluring, flamboyant, frivolous! (SLIDE 4) The opulence of hig...
Experiences of conflict rarely adhere to the historical confines of defined dates. Although the Seco...
In 1958 a new collaborative group of British ready-to-wear fashion houses was formed; The Fashion Ho...
From the end of World War II, British clothing retailers—most notably, Marks & Spencer (M&S)—increas...
Not only did World War II bring about changes to the economy and policy, it also changed women’s fas...
In the aftermath of the Second World War, the fashion departments of London’s West End department st...
The Second World War disrupted the usual networks and geographies of London fashion, changing the wa...
This paper will examine changes in the home market retail and distribution structure for British dre...
The critical impetus of this study is to explore the period between 1944 and 1951 on its own terms, ...
British fashion retailers emerged from the Second World War with severe stock shortages and shabby, ...
DRESSING DURING AUSTERITY This exhibition explores how men and women found new ways to dress as the ...
This study examines the creation and professionalisation of a recognisable English couture industry ...
© 2022 The Author. Published by the Marketing History Society of Japan. This is an open access artic...
This article investigates and compares how fashion reacted to the deprivations of the Second World W...
This article explores 1940’s fashion. Much has been documented about the huge influence Dior’s 1947 ...
Glamorous, ostentatious, extravagant, alluring, flamboyant, frivolous! (SLIDE 4) The opulence of hig...
Experiences of conflict rarely adhere to the historical confines of defined dates. Although the Seco...
In 1958 a new collaborative group of British ready-to-wear fashion houses was formed; The Fashion Ho...
From the end of World War II, British clothing retailers—most notably, Marks & Spencer (M&S)—increas...
Not only did World War II bring about changes to the economy and policy, it also changed women’s fas...