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Fashion history
Introduction of history of fashion
Topic about coco channel
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“Fashion is not something that exists in dresses only. Fashion is in the sky, in the street, fashion has to do with ideas, the way we live, what is happening.”-Coco Chanel. Gabrielle Bonheur Chanel was a legendary fashion designer famous worldwide for her revolutionary designs. Her career especially thrilled during the 1920s and 1930s. She was born on August 19, 1883, in Saumur, located in the Loire Valley of France. Her unmarried mother worked there. However, Chanel as an adult claimed that she was born in Auvergne as an attempt to hide her rough childhood. She also said that she was born in 1893, making her ten years younger than she really was.
In contrast to her later years of triumph, Coco Chanel endured an impoverished childhood. Her mother passed away in February 16th, 1895 due to exhaustion and overwork at age 33. Her father, named Albert, was left with Chanel and her four siblings. Her father was a peddler, whose job was to travel from place to place and sell small goods. He did not have enough income to care for all five of his children, so he “farmed out” the kids to his relatives and orphanages right after Chanel’s mother died. He sent Chanel, a young child of age 12, to an orphanage belonging to a Catholic monastery in Aubazine.
There, she, now an orphan, lived with the sisters of the Congregation of the Sacred Heart of Mary and learned the trade of a seamstress. She received strict convent education from the nuns. As for vacations, she went to the provincial capital of Moulins to meet her relatives. She further developed her skills of sewing. She was given no formal education, but working as a dressmaker in the convent provided a strong basis that led to her future career as a designer.
At the age of 18, she left ...
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...e again. She was buried at the Bois-de-Vaux Cemetery, in Lausanne, Switzerland. Although Coco Chanel’s astronomical career ended on that day, her legacy continues on, and the Chanel brand remains as one of the most recognizable names in world fashion today.
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...s far as the author is concern, the fact that CoCo Chanel left the Victorian ideas and lived a life of her own made other women admire her. According to the author, clothing design was her star that raised her above other women. It would be better if other women would emulate her character and moral beliefs that should attract other women.
Mary MacKillop was born in Fitzroy, Melbourne on January the 15th 1842. She was the first child to Alexander MacKillop and Flora MacDonald. Mary was one child out of 8 and spent most of her childhood years looking after and acting like a second mother to her siblings. The MacKillop family were quite poor so at the young age of 14, Mary got herself a job as a governess and as teacher at a Portland school. All the money Mary earned went towards her families everyday living. While working as a governess, Mary met Father Julian Tension Woods. By the time Mary had reached the age of 15 she had decided that she wanted to be a nun. She also wanted to devote her life to the poor and less fortunate. So upon meeting Father Julian Tension Woods she told him her hopes and dreams, and together they decided to set up a school. In 1861, they worked together and opened Australia's first free Catholic school. At the time only the rich could afford schooling. But at the school Mary opened anyone was welcome. Mary was a great teacher and became very popular within the community. Although Mary was very pleased with her work she still felt a religious calling. So Mary and Father Woods started their own order, 'The Sisters of St. Joseph.' In 1867 Mary then moved to Adelaide where she opened another school. Before long there were 17 schools open across Australia. Mary's followers grew and by 1909 she had followers all over Australia. Mary later died on the 8th of August 1909.
Frances Cabrini was born in July 15, 1850 to Agostino Cabrini and Stella Oldini in Sant’Angelo Lodigiano, Lombardi, Italy. She was one of eleven children born to the Cabrini family and one of the only four children that survived past adolescence. She was born two months premature and was small and weak as a child. These factors, as well as the strong faith of her parents, would have an impact on the rest of her life, mission, and works. Agostino Cabrini, her father, often read Propagation of the Faith to her and the rest of the family. The stories were all about the missions in China and from a young age, Frances desired to become a missionary. By the age of eighteen, Frances knew that she wanted to be a nun, however; her weak health stood in the way. She could not join the Sacred Heart of Jesus. So instead, in 1863, Frances enrolled as a boarding student at the Normal School in Arluno with the intentions of becoming a schoolteacher. The school was directed by the Daughters of the Sacred Heart. Frances lived at the school for five years, residing in the convent with the nuns. Frances was elated to live with the nuns and to share a faith-centered life with them. She graduated from the Normal School in 1868 with a degree in teaching.
... Louis XI to bury her in Angers Cathedral at Chateau Dampiere between her mother and father. Margaret of Anjou died August 25, 1482 at the age of fifty-two years old, Louis did follow her final request and her remains are still there today.
Working at her father’s clothing shop, she became very knowledgeable about expensive textiles and embellishments, which were captured in her works later in career. She was able to capture the beauty and lavishness of fabrics in portraits of aristocratic women.
Stokstad, Marilyn. Art History. New York: Prentice Hall Inc. and Harry N. Abrams Inc. 1995.
Marie Antoinette’s last words were thought to be polite as she braved her fate in a simple white dress, already having wished her children the best (“The Grand Dauphin”), “Pardon me Sir, I meant not to do it", to the executioner, whose foot she accidentally stepped on before she was executed. Her body was thrown into an unmarked cemetery, rue d'Anjou until exhumed in 1815 and properly reburied (Buzzi).
Futagawa, Yukio. Pierre Chareau with Bernard Bijvoet: Maison Dalsace (“Maison de Verre”) Paris, France 1928-1932. (Tokyo: A.D.A. Edita). 1988. Print.
In primary or elementary school Mother Teresa went to a local school run by nuns and in secondary or high school she went to a state run school. After high school at age eighteen she joined the Loreto Sisters of Dublin in Ireland. At the convent she took the name Mary Teresa and later become Mother Teresa (Mother Biography [1]). In Dublin she started training to be a nun the continued and finished in Darjeeling, India. In 1928 Mother Teresa took her first religious vows she took her final vows in 1937 (“Moth...
She learns geography, history, art and French fluently. She is taught how to be a teacher, and how to be employed, which was not typical for a woman of her time.
After being in France for a little under a year she was finally sent back to Africa to start her third term. The first place she was assigned during this term was at a mission compound near the town of Galmi. Her time at this station however was short for many health problems occurred while there. Eventually she requested a transfer and was sent to another mission station.
Shortly after Louis XIV’s death, Louis XVI came into power. King Louis XVI’s wife, Marie Antoinette was also a pioneer in the French fashion culture. As the Queen of France from 1774-1792, her life was full of extravagance and luxury and she wanted her fashion to be representative of her lifestyle. In fact, she w...
Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History | The Metropolitan Museum of Art." The Metropolitan Museum of Art - Home. 2004. Accessed October 27, 2011. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/duch/hd_duch.htm.
O’Donnell, Sr., Joseph J.. “Art and the French Revolution”. The Eerie Digest, May 2013. Web. 5th May 2013.
The story of Coco Chanel's rise from obscure beginnings to the heights of the fashion world.