Skip to main content

Fashion

to
6
9
428
584
33
2
14
14
6
24
59
55
69
92
3
2
1
Fashion For Sale
Color:  White
Period: 1940s
1940S Campus Off White Tropical Rayon & Silk Bamboo Pineapple Hawaiian Shirt
Located in New York, NY
1940S Campus Off White Tropical Rayon & Silk Bamboo Pineapple Hawaiian Shirt
Category

1940s Fashion

1940S White Cotton Piqué Off Shoulder Dress
Located in New York, NY
1940S White Cotton Piqué Off Shoulder Dress
Category

1940s Fashion

1940S Cream & Orange Silk Blend Hawaiian Print Shirt Made In Hawaii
Located in New York, NY
1940S Cream & Orange Silk Blend Hawaiian Print Shirt Made In Hawaii
Category

1940s Fashion

1940S Peach Rayon Satin Two Piece Pajamas Set
Located in New York, NY
1940S Peach Rayon Satin Two Piece Pajamas Set
Category

1940s Fashion

1940S White Rayon Satin Men's Floral Embroidered Frock Coat Jacket From France
Located in New York, NY
1940S White Rayon Satin Men's Floral Embroidered Frock Coat Jacket From France
Category

1940s Fashion

1940S Baby Blue Bias Cut Nylon Slip Dress With Cream Lace Trim
Located in New York, NY
1940S Baby Blue Bias Cut Nylon Slip Dress With Cream Lace Trim
Category

1940s Fashion

Related Items
Vintage Chanel Peach Silk-Satin Dress
Located in London, GB
This vintage Chanel dress is cut from lined silk-satin that drapes fluidly along the frame. Its lustrous peach tones are offset with a silver-tone...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary French Fashion

Chloé by Phoebe Philo vintage S/S 2002 embellished back and sleeves cream suit
Located in Antwerp, BE
Timeless elegance with this stunning vintage Chloé by Phoebe Philo suit from spring/summer 2002. Crafted in a chic cream color, this suit features a be...
Category

Early 2000s French Fashion

Adolfo New York "Chanel style" suit
Located in Saint-Ouen-Sur-Seine, FR
Black & White suit in wool with gold metal buttons
Category

1970s American Fashion

Norell Wool Knit Day Dress
Located in New York, NY
Norman Norell, oatmeal tone, wool knit, sheath, having buttons closing down the middle front, short sleeves, a rolled neck with a front bow and visible deep patch pockets.
Category

1960s American Fashion

Yves Saint Laurent Rive Gauche Patterned Silk Day Dress
Located in New York, NY
Yves Saint Laurent, Rive Gauche, ivory silk, having a black and red diamond pattern day dress. Dress details, include a U neckline, having black ...
Category

1970s French Fashion

1920s White Cotton Eyelet Slip Dress
Located in London, GB
This is a really good 1920s cotton whitework slip dress. It is incredibly detailed and the execution of the eyelet work is exceptional. The dress may have been an underdress for a te...
Category

1920s British Fashion

GIVENCHY designed by JOHN GALLIANO S/S 1996 Bow Blazer Skirt Suit Set 38
Located in Thiensville, WI
Vintage Givenchy (designed by John Galliano for the S/S/1996 Collection) 2 piece cream / light yellow blazer skirt set. Blazer has notched lapel collar. Bow-like gathered details at...
Category

1990s French Fashion

Vintage Y2K Dolce and Gabbana silk cami top
Located in London, GB
✨Vintage Y2K Dolce and Gabbana cami top ✨100% silk ✨Pristine conditions with all original labels attached ✨Size S
Category

Early 2000s Italian Fashion

Christian Dior By John Galliano Lace-Trimmed Satin Brief Panty, Fall-Winter 2003
Located in Geneva, CH
Made from stretch-silk satin, this Christian Dior by John Galliano brief has a pretty luster and feels really soft on the skin. Outlined with delicate lace scalloping in a contrastin...
Category

Early 2000s French Fashion

Couture MartinMargiela 1998 WorkOnPaper & Artisanal Line0 WhiteLingerie BoxedSet
Located in Chicago, IL
As conceptual art while he transitioned to Hermes Creative Director in 1998, Belgian Martin Margiela--whose creations today debut in the setting of a contemporary-art gallery priced at upwards of EU$150,000--created this stenciled or block print. Conceived by arguably the most culturally influential contemporary fashion designer since Gabriel "Coco" Chanel, it is part of a limited-edition-of-two white-boxed set that includes the couture Maison Martin Margiela "Artisanal Line 0" body-harness lingerie in its maker's signature color white for Spring 1998. The same lingerie--one white and the other black--starred in a film made by Margiela among the five that he screened to present his Spring/Summer 1998 "Flat Collection" in Paris at the Conciergerie. In that film titled "4", which begins with a view of the iconic topless tabi "boots", the hands of Margiela's white-labcoat-clad assistants enter the frame to manipulate different garments on a model who initially wears the exterior lingerie (see our photos) as if jewelry. A simple dark collared coat, a white collared button-down shirt, and a dark button-down cardigan--all with the "displaced neckline" or "displaced shoulder" of the flat-hanging clothes--are transformed into new collarless plunging v-neck garments, which appear to be ruched when folded under the harness of the lingerie. Both black versions of the lingerie are in museum collections. In Martin Margiela's home-country, the ModeMuseum (MoMu) archived its collected piece as OBJ7660. In the 2018 Parisian retrospective exhibition at Musee de la Mode/Palais Galleria when its artistic director was Martin Margiela (working with Curator Alexandre Samson), the second black lingerie was featured on a mannequin and collected the same year by the Vogue Paris Foundation. Other conceptual designs from this same 1998 collection of jewelry were acquired by TheMet museum in Manhattan. Without the restriction of the use and function of clothing, the small uncreased print--on a card that can be removed from the interior-box bottom that it loosely spans--shows the buyer how to endlessly fashion unique tops using the structural-elastic lingerie as an undergarment for their own pre-worn button-down shirts. This is a more obvious example of the once avant-garde concept of anti-fashion upcycling that Martin Margiela introduced to challenge social and fashion-industry norms by the 1990s, which echos the revolutionary anti-art of Marcel Duchamp. Essentially, valuable art/fashion can be made from everyday vintage objects. While Duchamp did so in 1917 with a men's porcelain urinal titled "Fountain" attached to a gallery exhibition wall, they both made the point that it is the way that such items are reassembled that can make the result a progressive statement. What makes the print so special and worthy of framing for display is that, without words, the three numbered images on a single white card encapsulate the before-its-time fashion manifesto of Martin Margiela to recycle fashion in remarkable new wearable ways, such as harnessed by his unique lingerie. According to The New York Times in its 2021 feature-story that reflected on his radical fashion design and delved into his crossover art, Margiela "changed how we dressed in the 1990s", while his art embodies "the visionary man he has always been." At a turning-point shortly after Margiela designed this couture set in 1997, his personal manifesto became more difficult to accomplish in his fashion career as the new leader of France's historic luxury fashion-house Hermes, for which his first womenswear collection was presented for Autumn/Winter 1998. Frustrated by the limitations of the industrialized luxury trade and conglomerate conflicts with his closely guarded privacy, the famously "invisible" designer pre-maturely retired from the fashion industry in 2009 to independently build on his clever artistry in other mediums. Margiela continues to demonstrate what he often told his fashion teams: "The less you have, the more creative you are as a designer." This minimal finely-crafted lingerie without size or gender restriction--composed of adjustable "polya-elasthanne" straps with a clear anti-slip strip on the underside and three silver-plated metal double-rings--can be worn either as a concealed structural undergarment or as a visible jewelry-like body harness in appreciation of its meaning as a foundation for recycling fashion, pure form, and meaningful color. While the initial Maison Martin Margiela ready-to-wear brand tag until the late 1990s was a distinct corner-sewn unbranded white label accompanied by tags for origin and materials/care, the couture version for this lingerie is a single tiny white unbranded tag stitched in a line near the end of the waist strap, noting in English, "Made In France," with succinct material/care identification. The set's original white unbranded box and its white black-typed couture-identification sticker complete the "invisible-brand" aesthetic. We interpret the black-type codes on the aged box-sticker (“E98 ST HAUT; Struct Elas Blanc; 02; TU"): Spring 1998 Haute Couture; white structural-elastic garment; Artisanal Line 0 edition of two; one size only. The print, lingerie and box are in very good condition as shown in the photos with only one mark on the rear edge of the exterior box-lid. Although initially tried on by the sole owner to realize a restructured shirt, the lingerie body-harness was never worn. It was collected in Belgium at the Brussels boutique where Martin Margiela initially sold his brand with his founding business-partner Jenny Meirens since 1988. Prior, Margiela worked for several years as a fashion-design assistant to Parisian Jean Paul Gaultier. Both designers have since received independent museum retrospectives internationally--from Paris' Grand Palais and Musee Palais Galliera (The City of Paris Fashion Museum) to NYC's The Brooklyn Museum and Antwerp's MoMu. While others continue to try, Martin Margiela (b.1957) is the only leading fashion designer to have made a full-time transition to the commercial contemporary-art world with such highly valued works. As a rare revealing piece of both fashion and art history, the increasing value of this Maison Martin Margiela 1997...
Category

1990s French Fashion

Printed silk déshabillé Rochas Circa 1980
Located in Saint-Ouen-Sur-Seine, FR
Printed silk déshabillé. Branded fabric. Belt-loop but belt is missing. SIZE XL
Category

1980s French Fashion

1920s Vintage Dress in Ivory Silk With Pink Embroidery and Topstitching
Located in Portland, OR
This is a beautiful ivory silk vintage dress from the late 1920's. The dress is sleeveless, with a pink silk braided tie at the neck and it is decorated with gorgeous pink embroidery...
Category

1920s Unknown Fashion

Previously Available Items
1940S White Hand Embroidered Rayon Chiffon Top
Located in New York, NY
1940S White Hand Embroidered Rayon Chiffon Top
Category

1940s Fashion

Vintage 1940's Metallic Gold Lamé Flame Rhinestone Mesh Showgirl Circus Costume
Located in Beverly Hills, CA
A truly unique and ultra seductive metallic gold lamé fire-flame showgirl circus dance costume dating back to the mid 1940's. This sensational showstoppe...
Category

1940s American Fashion

1940S Cream Embroidered Colorful Birds Silk Kimono
Located in New York, NY
1940S Cream Embroidered Colorful Birds Silk Kimono
Category

1940s Fashion

1940S White Sheer Rayon Chiffon & Lace Robe
Located in New York, NY
1940S White Sheer Rayon Chiffon & Lace Robe
Category

1940s Fashion

1940 Charles James Signed Triangle Pleat Bodice White Silk Organza Museum Piece
Located in West Hollywood, CA
TheRealList presents: a museum-worthy bodice created by Charles James in about 1940. James is remembered for his masterful command of fabric, structure, and silhouettes and this piec...
Category

1940s French Fashion

Vintage 1940's Insect Garden Novelty Print Purple Ivory Silk Flutter-Sleeve Gown
Located in Beverly Hills, CA
A whimsical and totally unique insect garden print semi-sheer silk gown dating back to mid 1940's. The royal purple-blue bug print itself is a masterpiece! It's a variety of insects ...
Category

1940s American Fashion

1940S White Rayon Ribbon Trim Slip Dress XL
Located in New York, NY
1940S White Rayon Ribbon Trim Slip Dress XL
Category

1940s Fashion

1940S White Nylon Lace Trim Shirred Bust Slip Dress
Located in New York, NY
1940S White Nylon Lace Trim Shirred Bust Slip Dress
Category

1940s Fashion

1940S Ivory Silk Short Sleeve Button Down Dress
Located in New York, NY
1940S Ivory Silk Short Sleeve Button Down Dress
Category

1940s Fashion

VINTAGE c.1940’s Ivory Tan Cotton Lace Beaded Applique Vent V-Neck Midi Dress
Located in Thiensville, WI
VINTAGE c.1940’s Ivory Tan Cotton Lace Beaded Applique Vent V-Neck Midi Dress Circa: 1940’s Label(s): None Style: Midi dress Color(s): Shades of ivory and tan Lined: No Unmarke...
Category

1940s Fashion

Vintage 1940's Hawaiian Green Leaf Print Ivory Crepe Maxi Belted Wrap Dress Gown
Located in Beverly Hills, CA
A stunning and hard to find "Trade Wind by Hawaiian Sportswear" ivory crepe dress dating back to the mid 1940's. The large-scale green leaf motif used on this garment has this Old Ho...
Category

1940s American Fashion

1940S Baby Blue Bias Cut Nylon Slip Dress With Cream Lace Trim
Located in New York, NY
1940S Baby Blue Bias Cut Nylon Slip Dress With Cream Lace Trim
Category

1940s Fashion

Fashion: Shop Vintage Clothing, Haute Couture and More

Fashion is littered with stories we can’t help but consume with voracity. Behind the world’s revered luxury houses and designers, there are often accounts of modest beginnings that gave way to the resonant work we’ve cherished all of our lives.

Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel learned to sew under the tutelage of nuns in an orphanage. Later, as an impoverished teenager at a boarding school in central France, clad in the drab clothes of the underclass compared to those of her classmates, she furthered her needlework skills. By the early 1900s, she was helming a hat shop with help from her sister and her aunt.

Chanel made spare, unadorned hats at first, and the now-momentous “little black dress,” published in the form of a sketch in Vogue in 1926, symbolized her intention to design for all social classes. Working with simple lines and ordinary fabrics, Chanel created garments that she hoped would encourage women to leave extravagant clothes behind. The young milliner would soon become pivotal to the evolution of both covetable casual wear and handmade high-fashion apparel, building a brand that has influenced countless designers all over the world.

“Fashion is not something that exists in dresses only,” Chanel said. “Fashion is in the sky, in the street; fashion has to do with ideas, the way we live, what is happening.”

Around the same time, a young former hotel bellboy named Guccio Gucci began to sell imported leather luggage from a small retail space in his native Florence, and it wouldn’t be long before he was overseeing a number of artisans who were making leather goods and other accessories. With the help of his sons, he opened a second shop in Rome and later launched his handbags, wallets and more.

There are people like Chanel and Gucci, sometimes of meager means, working in near obscurity to create lasting and innovative garments and accessories that today fill the interiors of our favorite boutiques and, ultimately, the closets of our home.

There are family-owned luxury-goods companies, such as Hermès in Paris, which began as a saddle manufacturer in the 1800s, serving the era’s carriage trade before it would expand to include venerable handbags as well as its numerous silk scarves, each emblazoned with a richly decorative design.

For many of us, the narratives behind the ornate monograms that adorn these iconic works are just as important as the items themselves.

Haute couture from the House of Chanel — practical, form-fitting evening dresses and menswear made of fine tweeds — has a long lineage, but now it’s earned a legitimate place in museums as often as it has in the homes of modern marquee influencers. Vintage Yves Saint Laurent leather clutches and handbags couldn’t have aged better over time, either. The French luxury fashion label’s long history of vibrant, gender-blurring designs, including the revolutionary Mondrian minidress in 1965, owe to the creative inclinations of a young Yves, who made paper dolls as a child and designed dresses for the women in his family by the time he was a teenager.

The appeal of vintage and designer clothing — whether it’s nostalgia for ’80s fashion treasures like oversize blazers or the bright and elaborate patterns that characterize sundresses of the 1960s — endures, and our appetite for irreplaceable garments as well as their riveting origin stories won’t recede anytime soon. An authentic handbag or purse from Hermès isn’t merely durable and alluring. The Birkin, for example, is hand-sewn according to Hermès’s centuries-old saddle-stitching technique, comes in a variety of exotic leathers and is also a savvy investment.

“The Birkin’s value has consistently risen and never fluctuated downward,” says Reece Morgan, head of handbags and accessories for Xupes, citing the fact that “production has been highly limited to maintain its unattainable aura.” In fact, he adds, Hermès has been “scaling back production each year.”

Today, we’re captivated by the work of prodigious Illinois-born talent Virgil Abloh, who not only triumphed in the fashion world with his Milan-based streetwear label Off-White, but was also a visual artist, a furniture designer and more. In 2018, Abloh, who learned about fashion from his seamstress mother, became one of the first Black designers to head a French luxury fashion house, having secured an artistic director role at Louis Vuitton.

“His clothing turns wearers into accomplices of his grand artistic scheme,” Michael Darling, the chief curator at Chicago’s Museum of Contemporary Art, wrote of Abloh’s work.

On 1stDibs, you can revel in the stories behind the fashion we love and browse everything from classic, one-of-a-kind gowns crafted by Parisian couturiers to stylish, modern streetwear designed by forward-looking brands. Shop 19th-century Louis Vuitton trunks or kaleidoscopic and colorful 1960s skirts by Emilio Pucci or edgy ensembles by visionary designers like Azzedine Alaïa. Your fashion journey begins right here.

Recently Viewed

View All