Alexander McQueen/Damien Hirst Black Silk Scarf Persephone Butterfly
By Alexander McQueen
Located in London, GB
This black silk scarf with an exquisite butterfly pattern is part of the collaboration series
Alexander McQueen/Damien Hirst Black Silk Scarf Persephone Butterfly
By Alexander McQueen
Located in London, GB
This black silk scarf with an exquisite butterfly pattern is part of the collaboration series
Alexander McQueen/Damien Hirst Red Psalm Skull Butterfly Silk Scarf
By Alexander McQueen
Located in London, GB
Sharing their passion for unusual beauty Alexander McQueen and Damien Hirst started a collaboration
ALEXANDER MCQUEEN white silk MEADOWN & BUTTERFLY Scarf
By Alexander McQueen
Located in Zürich, CH
Alexander McQueen meadow and butterfly-print scarf in off-white, light green, brown and yellow
Sold
Size: 104 x 120 cm (approx 41x47 inch)
New Alexander Mcqueen Silk Butterfly and Skull Semi-Sheer Black Scarf
By Alexander McQueen
Located in San Francisco, CA
New Alexander McQueen large semi-sheer black scarf featuring giant butterfly or moth with black
ALEXANDER MCQUEEN 100% silk fuschia pink skeleton butterfly print scarf
By Alexander McQueen
Located in Hong Kong, NT
ALEXANDER MCQUEEN 100% silk fuschia pink skeleton butterfly print scarf Brand: Alexander Mcqueen
Sold
Size: 104 x 120 cm (approx 41x47 inch)
New Alexander Mcqueen Silk Butterfly and Skull Semi-Sheer Grey Scarf
By Alexander McQueen
Located in San Francisco, CA
New Alexander McQueen large semi-sheer gray scarf featuring giant butterfly or moth with black
Sold
Size: 104 x 120 cm (approx 41x47 inch)
New Alexander Mcqueen Silk Butterfly and Skull Semi-Sheer Pink Scarf
By Alexander McQueen
Located in San Francisco, CA
New Alexander McQueen large semi-sheer scarf featuring giant butterfly or moth with black skull
Sold
Size: approximately 75 by 20 inches
New Alexander McQueen Butterfly and Skull Scarf in Black and White
By Alexander McQueen
Located in San Francisco, CA
New Alexander McQueen large black scarf featuring butterflies or moths throughout and a large skull
ALEXANDER McQUEEN A/W 2015 "Butterfly in Flight" Silk Chiffon Butterfly Scarf
By Alexander McQueen, Sarah Burton
Located in Thiensville, WI
ALEXANDER McQUEEN A/W 2015 "Butterfly in Flight" Silk Chiffon Butterfly Scarf Brand
Alexander McQueen Silk Chiffon Butterfly Scarf, Spring - Summer 2008
By Alexander McQueen
Located in Cincinnati, OH
Alexander McQueen, Spring-Summer 2008, silk chiffon scarf with floral butterfly pattern throughout
British fashion designer Lee Alexander McQueen, the original creative engine behind the Alexander McQueen label, was beloved for his expert tailoring and theatrical runway shows. After his suicide in 2010, fans left tributes to the man and his talents outside Alexander McQueen boutiques worldwide. Record-breaking crowds visited the posthumous retrospective of the designer’s work at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City and the Victoria and Albert in London.
The inspirations for vintage Alexander McQueen bags, dresses, jackets and other items came from many quarters — film, music, current events, history, his heritage and fashions of the past. The designer's runway presentations were not just displays of clothing but were personal expressions of the zeitgeist, often touching on our cultural anxieties and concerns. McQueen’s own thoughts and feelings about love, death, gender, genocide, colonialism, global warming and the extinction of species all appear in his pieces.
McQueen certainly shook up fashion; he was a born Rottweiler. His upbringing on a council estate in north London played a part, but his family was close and supportive, not dysfunctional. He was proud of his Scottish heritage: He was a defiant fashion warrior. His historical themes and shows — such as “Highland Rape,” 2002, which was inspired by England’s “rape of Scotland,” as McQueen called it — always invoked powerful reactions from his audience of fashion pros.
“What you see in the work is the person himself. And my heart is in my work,” McQueen told Harper’s Bazaar in 2007.
It is perhaps this heart, and the heart’s exposure, that drew the crowds and made McQueen's creations both popular and emotionally resonant. Because the work was personal and thus layered with feeling, the motifs — decorative embellishments and fabric choices — have meaning. In other words, in McQueen’s oeuvre, plaid is more than simply a pattern.
Find vintage Alexander McQueen fashion and accessories — including the designer's coveted bags and comfortable, stretchy jersey knit dresses and gowns — on 1stDibs.
We’ve long had a love affair with vintage and designer scarves. Every glamorous go-to ensemble deserves the lightweight finishing touch that can be added with this stylish, versatile accessory.
Scarves have held a distinctive place in the evolution of formal and casual wear for centuries. And although now firmly entrenched in western culture, the origins of this neckwear are global.
Egyptian Queen Nefertiti is known to have worn a finely woven scarf with a headdress, and Emperor Cheng of the Chinese Han dynasty presided over an army of warriors whose scarves denoted their rank. The idea of scarves as status symbols still persists; for example, silk scarves, which were favored by the upper class during the reign of Queen Victoria, are an out-of-reach luxury item, cost prohibitive for many consumers. However, the increasing diversity of available materials over the years has rendered this adornment more accessible since their early days.
Luxury houses and various designers helped elevate scarves and long, flowing wraps as a desirable fashion accessory during the 20th century.
Visionary Italian designer Emilio Pucci — the first fashion designer to enter the lifestyle market — introduced abstractions and dazzling psychedelic elements to scarves, while mid-century era multidisciplinary American artist Vera Neumann drew on Japanese techniques to create exuberant textile designs based on her paintings and drawings.
Established in Paris in 1837, Hermès didn’t start creating their famously decorative scarves until 100 years later, in 1937. Before long, the Hermès scarf, then crafted from strong imported Chinese silk, became an iconic work favored by actresses such as Audrey Hepburn and Grace Kelly, a lifetime enthusiast of the family-owned brand. Hermès has produced over 2,000 different scarf designs in the decades since Robert Dumas, Émile-Maurice Hermès’s son-in-law, crafted the first one.
On 1stDibs, find a broad selection of vintage scarves that includes flamboyant and colorful accessories designed by Chanel, Yves Saint Laurent and more.