Skirt Suit thumbnail 1
Skirt Suit thumbnail 2
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Not on display

Skirt Suit

1971 (manufactured)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Mary Quant’s first boutique, Bazaar, opened in London's King's Road in 1955, launching a successful fashion career. Her youthful easy-to-wear clothing became so popular that in 1963, she launched a lower-priced ready-to-wear range called 'Ginger Group'. She also entered into licensing agreements with manufacturers to produce hosiery, underwear, cosmetics and accessories bearing her name. Almost anyone, whatever their income, could spare the money to buy a pair of 'Mary Quant' stockings or a lipstick. This enabled girls who could not otherwise afford her clothing to feel in touch with fashion, and made Mary Quant a household name.

By 1970, Mary Quant and her business partners closed the Bazaar boutiques to focus on the licencing business, although Quant continued to design good quality ready-to-wear fashion retailed in department stores and independent boutiques under her own name. This outfit comes from the wardrobe of Pamela Howard Mace (1932-2008), who had a long career in fashion, after starting work in London for the magazine Home Notes, at the age of sixteen. She moved to South Africa for a while, but returned to London in 1962, where she worked for Mary Quant as her PA, becoming design director in 1968 until the late 1970s. The surviving clothes from her time at Mary Quant show the evolution of the Quant style, from minimal mod fashion in the 1960s, through to the more vintage-inspired designs and synthetic textiles of the mid-1970s.

Object details

Categories
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 2 parts.

  • Jacket
  • Skirt
Materials and techniques
Brief description
Ensemble of jacket and skirt, printed viscose, white female figures on brown, Mary Quant, 1971
Physical description
A loosely tailored, unlined jacket of viscose, printed with a repeating pattern of silhouettes of Edwardian style women, on a brown ground. A matching skirt, gently flaring to the knee.
Marks and inscriptions
Mary Quant's Ginger Group / MADE IN ENGLAND (Woven label stitched inside back collar)
Gallery label
(30/03/2020)
[Mary Quant exhibition, 2019]

JACKET AND SKIRT
1972
Worn by Pamela Howard-Mace

As Quant’s personal assistant in 1968, Pamela Howard-Mace earned an enviable salary of £2,600 a year and drove a Ford Cortina as her company car. She later became design director of Mary Quant and exerted a forceful influence over the look of the brand in the 1970s, maintaining Quant’s high standards of quality and design.

Printed viscose crêpe (modern blouse)
Labelled ‘Mary Quant’s Ginger Group’
Made at the Steinberg factory, Pontypridd, Wales (probably)
Given by Linda Kirby in memory of her godmother, Pamela Howard-Mace
V&A: T.31:1&2-2013
Credit line
Given by Linda Kirby in memory of her godmother, Pamela Howard Mace
Object history
Worn by Pamela Howard Mace (1932-2008)
Summary
Mary Quant’s first boutique, Bazaar, opened in London's King's Road in 1955, launching a successful fashion career. Her youthful easy-to-wear clothing became so popular that in 1963, she launched a lower-priced ready-to-wear range called 'Ginger Group'. She also entered into licensing agreements with manufacturers to produce hosiery, underwear, cosmetics and accessories bearing her name. Almost anyone, whatever their income, could spare the money to buy a pair of 'Mary Quant' stockings or a lipstick. This enabled girls who could not otherwise afford her clothing to feel in touch with fashion, and made Mary Quant a household name.

By 1970, Mary Quant and her business partners closed the Bazaar boutiques to focus on the licencing business, although Quant continued to design good quality ready-to-wear fashion retailed in department stores and independent boutiques under her own name. This outfit comes from the wardrobe of Pamela Howard Mace (1932-2008), who had a long career in fashion, after starting work in London for the magazine Home Notes, at the age of sixteen. She moved to South Africa for a while, but returned to London in 1962, where she worked for Mary Quant as her PA, becoming design director in 1968 until the late 1970s. The surviving clothes from her time at Mary Quant show the evolution of the Quant style, from minimal mod fashion in the 1960s, through to the more vintage-inspired designs and synthetic textiles of the mid-1970s.
Bibliographic reference
Illustrated in Mary Quant (V&A, London, 2019) fig. 164, page 181
Collection
Accession number
T.31:1&2-2013

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Record createdMarch 7, 2013
Record URL
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