Vera Borea
Founded | 1931 |
---|---|
Founder | Countess Borea de Buzzaccarini Regoli |
Products | Made-to-order, Ready to wear, Fashion Sportswear, Leather Goods, Shoes |
Vera Borea is a French fashion house founded in 1931 in Paris, France by Countess Borea de Buzzaccarini Regoli.
VERA BOREA was one of the very first houses to offer luxury sportswear for women.[1] The house produced high-end garments for ski, tennis, golf, beach, boating, motoring, biking and hunting, along day and evening dresses, accessories, shoes and jewellery.[2][3][4][5][6][7][8]
Known for expertly tailored sports and travel suits[9] and dresses,[10] VERA BOREA came to fame with its innovative designs that promoted a new lifestyle, and acceptance of fashion sportswear as appropriate wear for other social occasions.[11][12]
History
Sports Models for City Wear : A couture house dedicated to sportswear
Countess de Regoli, a passionate sportswoman[13] born and raised in Italian Dolomites, was frustrated by a lack of clothing that was chic yet comfortable and began to design sportswear, négligées and swimming suits featuring special knitting stitch invented by her grand mother[14][15]
With assistance of her friend, the British-born Princess de Rohan, the Countess located her haute-couture salon at 29 rue d’Artois, at the very end of Faubourg Saint-Honoré. With growing success, the House established in 1935 a two-story shop at 376 rue Saint Honoré, which remained open until 2007.
With a no-nonsense, hands-on approach, Countess de Regoli, an avid skier, swimmer and golfer, tried out her creations on herself before she offered them for sale, and often modelled them for clients.[16] The designs appeared smart enough to be worn in town, reuniting sports and town wardrobes.[17]
- Ski suit by VERA BOREA, 1933
- VERA BOREA - Jumpsuit, 1934
- Tennis Dress by VERA BOREA, 1934
- Swimming suit by VERA BOREA, 1934
International success
VERA BOREA became soon the favorite destination on both sides of the Atlantic for women going for the new relaxed lifestyle.[18][19]
American department stores snapped her designs [20][21] and the House became the reference for garments that were simple in line but unusual in materials and cut, modern and practical. Vera Borea's creations often featured details that, beyond looking good, served a practical purpose and could be wore on multiple occasions such as after tennis, for motoring or on a shipboard.
Prestigious fashion magazines featured Vera Borea's creations alongside Hermès, Lanvin, Chanel and Patou.[22][23][24][25] Her designs were copied with those of Vionnet, Schiaparelli,[26] Lanvin and Patou.[27]
Scores of Americans soon joined the regular French clients at Borea’s Paris salon,[28] including famous sports women Helen Wills and Mademoiselle Suzanne Lenglen[29] and Hollywood movie stars such as Joan Bennett.[30]
Until the retirement of Countess de Regoli in 1962, Vera Borea was considered as one of the grand Parisian couturiers of its days and was a member of Parisian Haute-Couture.[31]
- Beach Pyjama by VERA BOREA, 1933
- Tennis dresses by VERA BOREA, 1933
- Ski suit by VERA BOREA, 1937
- Ski Suit for Arosa by VERA BOREA, 1939
A novel approach to elegance: relaxed simplicity, chic in details, gender fluidity
Vera Borea brought a sporty aesthetic and integrated the codes of athletic wear. The House started off designing daywear, and soon became known for garments that were elegant yet dynamic, stylish yet practical. Her creations often had unusual details that served a practical purpose. Even her evening wear, which she introduced a few seasons later, avoided superfluous details and instead focused on a superb cut, a comfortable fit, and excellent workmanship.[32][33][34]
In general, the designer favored simple but noble materials like wool, linen, hemp, and cotton, often with a textured or nubby surface.[35] Even when she used silk, it was usually in heavy woven patterns, which Vera Borea had made in Italy.[36]
She borrowed liberally from menswear, and regularly used wool flannel, tweeds and pinstripes for her women’s suits and separates.[37][38] Even ski ensembles were made of wool flannel and were often shown with an ascot or a tie. Another example of mixing men’s and women’s codes could be seen in an extraordinary black velvet ski suit that Borea designed in 1933, which looked like a tuxedo and closed with metallic clips that echoed those of a ski boot. The designer re-visited the theme often, like an evening wear she designed in 1945 that sported a tuxedo top and a full skirt like a ballerina’s tutu… decades before “le Smoking” burst onto the fashion scene.[39]
- Tuxedo Jumpsuit by VERA BOREA, 1945
- Day Dress by VERA BOREA, 1945
Technical innovation
A constant desire to explore and innovate permeated Vera Borea’s work. She figured out how to weather-proof corduroy and used it for a raincoat. Another raincoat was made of rubber. She spun hemp with silk for travel suits[40] and introduced in France the two-way-stretch elastic fabrics.[41] An evening coat was made of transparent fabric. An aviator jacket was made of supple leather and a knitted back panel, making it wearable both indoors and outdoors. Shoes sported heels made of rubber. Buttons were made of Brazil nuts. Other elements like fur, raffia, rope, bone, nut, feathers, pine cones and leather also showed up in her designs.[42][43]
- Ski suit in white Khasa by VERA BOREA, 1934
- Ski Jumpsuit by VERA BOREA, 1949
- Wind Jacket for Ski b y VERA BOREA, in Cracknyl fabric, 1949
Vera Borea Designs and Aesthetics
Modern cuts for a modern lifestyle
Vera Borea’s garments were ingenious on both an aesthetic and a practical level.
For example, the designer introduced high-waisted pants that skimmed the body from just below the bust down to the waist, with no belt necessary. She lowered the waistline down to the hips for a slimming line. She showed the pants with a bolero, bomber jackets, cropped sweaters or full blouses, which enhanced the elongated effect.
Wrap blouses and dresses did away with a need for zippers, buttons and belts. Halter tops did away with collars. Flared and gored skirts provided fullness and ease of movement while avoiding the stiffness and puffiness of a gathered waistline. Judicious draping on dresses and jackets, inverted pleats on pants, set-in panels; all continued this body-conscious philosophy. Waistbands and cuffs became ribbed and elasticized, offering more comfort and a sleeker line, as well as protection against the elements.[44] Scarves were built into blouses or jackets, or looped through a belt. Short sleeved jackets provided both polish and practicality. Pockets freed up a woman’s hands, as did chains and clips, which held a clip-on cigarette case, a visor, or a pair of gloves. Collars disappeared from coats and jackets, or were shrunk down to a simple stand-up style. Kimono cut coats closed with sashes or one or two oversized buttons. A slim ribbed turtleneck pullover became one with the body and removed the need for a scarf to keep the wearer’s throat warm. Thin ribbed pullovers were layered, making them ideal for cool temperatures or outdoor sports, but also easy to peel off once inside for maximum comfort.[45]
Vera Borea also made a mark with her swimsuits, which were often made from plain wool or cotton knits, and little ornament. The flair was in the details: low backs, criss-crossing straps, flared hips, discreet patterns. In 1934, the designer showed swimsuits worn under a matching skirt or flared shorts, giving women a new alternative to the fuller covering of an apron dress. With either option, a woman could simply slip on the skirt, shorts or dress over her swimsuit and go straight to lunch or jump into her car. An apron style sundress with a low back allowed women to soak up the sun's rays on the terrace of a restaurant. Pants got a cargo pocket and jackets incorporated pockets or deeply cuffed sleeves that could hold a swim cap or a wet bathing suit. The beach wear range grew to include sleeveless dresses with matching cotton coats and capri pants, oversized terry cloth lined jackets, high-waisted shorts and bra tops; with matching sandals, socks and beach bags.[46]
1932
Passionate about skiing, swimming and golf, Borea particularly enjoyed designing sportswear because she found it so difficult to buy clothing that was chic yet comfortable and well-priced. Her 1932 sports clothes designs included a skirt and waist-length jacket made of thick woolly tricot. These were worn in combination with an open work inside sweater of the same color. A tweed top coat with a black belt and a loose wrap around front gave a harmonious silhouette.[47] Paris fashion releases in the late spring were replete with frocks made of heavy black wool. Borea's black wool crepon frock had an incrusted collar and top sleeves of white shaved lamb.[48] Her summer 1932 fashions emphasized a high-waist effect, even when no belt was worn. The wearer's figure was closely fit from just below her bust to the waist. Borea's day skirts had hemlines from eight to ten inches from the ground. The designer favored materials which were quite rough and open-surfaced, primarily cotton or woolen ones. These were tailored into small modern suits which were worn with blouses made of dimity or crocheted Irish linen thread. These featured turn down collars and muslin ties. For town wear Borea stressed rough linen fabrics and she often employed negligee materials in formal fashions. She rarely used silks, but sometimes created heavy basket or chevron (insignia) patterns, which she obtained hand woven from Italy. The youthful designs were without pretense and definitely were not flapperish.[49]
1933
Summer designs revealed in February 1933 marked a milestone in Borea's designing career. From this point she no longer showed pants, with the exception of plus fours, which she styled for boating. Her very feminine sports frocks and evening gowns were quite similar, except for their lengths. The frocks were shorter, sixteen inches off the floor, while the evening gowns were ankle-length. Both possessed accentuated sunburn decolletes, suspended from very small ribbon-threaded metal chains. Borea lowered the waistlines of her creations to the hipbone. Her fashions began to exaggerate fullness in overblouses and the wide, flared, gored skirts she designed. Borea's bathing suits were short and flaring, made from plain wool or checked cotton. She created taffeta blouses with linen suits.[50] For spring and summer Borea used knitted shoulder yokes. A white suede golf jacket she designed had a knitted white cotton yoke. Her mixed wool motor and travel coats featured knitted wool yokes in very dark tones. Borea's cotton or linen dresses and jackets had yokes with bright contrasts and belts of knitted wool.[51]
1934
A novelty introduced in January 1934 was the skirted bathing suit. A skirt was worn over maillot or flaring one-piece shorts. The separate skirt began to outmode the fuller covering previously given by a beach apron. Borea's runner consisted of two flared panels which opened up on both sides. She used a large printed cotton handkerchief, which was popular in St. Tropez. Her creativity showed in the stylishness which she exhibited, working the scarves into new forms to cover backless frocks. Often the skirt was one color, the maillot another, and the wraplet a third. Some favored combinations were dark blue, venetian pink, and pale yellow, or Chinese blue, old rose, and beige.[52]
1935
In May 1935 a copy of a Borea sundress sold for $5.95 in a Los Angeles store. Made of cotton Indianhead, the dress left the entire back open to soak in the sun's warmth. It featured a block print with a natural background and a design of green or purple lines. The block print was also adorned with turquoise, gold, and coral (color). The sundress was fashionable to wear over a bathing suit for a luncheon indoors at a beach club.[53]
Borea's collection for fall 1935 included suits, jackets, and long redingotes, which were semi-fitted with leg-o'-mutton sleeves. Her fashions had a widening shoulder line. Her sports suits were uniquely cut in soft colored tweeds and were worn with dark crape shirts. The short sleeves on these shirts were also widened. Borea's day clothes featured a number of shades of gray-green. These were accentuated with buttons and scarves of yellow or guardsman's red. Bishop violet was a prominent color of Borea's evening wear designs. A nubby woolen, woven with bear's hair, was featured in the designer's sports wear. Her wool daytime frocks had velvet belts and trimmings. Highlights included pine-cone rosettes, which replaced sports buttons. Pheasant feathers were exhibited as trimming.[54]
1936
In July Borea released a white flannel suit especially for the sea-cum-casino. Worn with a chali blouse, it had subtle differences with suits introduced by Lucien Lelong and other designers.[55]
1938
Borea' silhouette was characterized by moulded bodices, normal shoulders, small waists, and short skirts, with some of them pleated and others slightly flared. She often made use of linens for beach, town, and evening wear. She frequently employed an apronline, which was either draped or tied in the back. Other prominent features of note were striped and embroidered materials (often oriental types), and colored piping (sewing). Her colorful printed frocks were worn beneath slim, dark coats.[56]
1939
For fall 1939 Borea styled striped necktie wool dresses. Her daytime frocks were worn with necktie wool blouses and heavy leather belts. Wool jackets were shown with plain skirts. Full skirted dresses with shirtwaist bodices were a part of her evening wear. One design was made in red and green vertical stripes. It tucked in at the waist. Her evening gowns were inspired from portraits by Velasquez. The features included long sleeves and gold buttons, with modern shirtwaist effects.[57]
1940
Flared basques were created by Borea for wear in the evenings. Her styles displayed screw-head buttons with a contrasting color on a square cut jacket. The look was very individual.[58]
1946
Borea's 1946 fall collection was presented on 12 September at her Paris salon, which had been redecorated with white and red and massed with red flowers. The lines of her clothing designs were simple, with natural shoulders. Fullness was eschewed except for drapery featured on a slim silhouette for evening. Among her fashions at the showing included a gray flannel ski suit with white leather suspenders and gold buckles. Borea introduced amber, mouse gray, and moss green corduroy box jackets over tweed suits or simple turtleneck wool dresses. Her town dresses and suits employed black wool bands or were inset with black velvet. Perhaps her most attractive ensemble in the collection was a mouse gray jacket with a plum frock.[59]
1959
Borea designed a raincoat made from golden brown proofed corduroy. Its buttons were of embossed silver.[60]
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Vera Borea. |
- Vera Borea Swimming Suit, circa 1930
- Black Suit by Vera Borea in Vogue US, 1932 by George Hoyningen-Huene
- Velvet ski suit created and presented by Vera Borea, circa 1933
- Evening dress by Vera Borea, circa 1935
- Ski Suits by Vera Borea, Hermes, Rochas, 1933
- Beachwear by Vera Borea and Hermes, 1938
- Red and Blue Ensemble by Vera Borea, October 1932
References
- ↑ COUTURE – An illustrated History of the Great Paris designers and Their creations. Edited by Ruth Lynam with Introduction by Nancy White, former editor of Harper’s Bazaar, Doubleday & Company, Inc, New York City 1972, page 81 “Vera Borea was the most outstanding of small couture houses dedicated to sportswear”
- ↑ VOGUE US, Feb. 1932
- ↑ VOGUE US. June 1933
- ↑ VOGUE FR, May 1947
- ↑ VOGUE US, May 1932
- ↑ VOGUE US, June 1st 1934
- ↑ VOGUE US, June 1948
- ↑ VOGUE FR, April 1938
- ↑ NEW YORK TIMES, Jan. 3rd 1932
- ↑ The Southeast Missourian, March 5th 1936
- ↑ THE NEW YORK TIME, Published : January 30, 1933
- ↑ The Montreal Gazette, Sept. 10th 1932
- ↑ Femina Oct 1933
- ↑ Vogue US, March 1933
- ↑ Vogue US, Oct 1932
- ↑ VOGUE US, March 1933
- ↑ The Montreal Gazette, Sept 10th 1932
- ↑ VOGUE US, Oct 1932
- ↑ Pittsburgh Post Gazette, June 9th 1932
- ↑ Kaufmann's Ad, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 9 June 1932, pg. 13.
- ↑ VOGUE US, March 1933
- ↑ VOGUE US 1932
- ↑ L’Officiel de la Mode, 1933
- ↑ VOGUE FR, May 1947
- ↑ Jardins des Modes, Aug 1948
- ↑ The Pittsburgh Press, March 22nd 1933
- ↑ The Pittsburgh Post, July 9th 1934
- ↑ VOGUE US, Oct 1932
- ↑ VOGUE US Oct. 1932
- ↑ Lodi News Sentinel, Jan 22nd 1936
- ↑ VOGUE FR, "Profils des Grands Couturiers de Paris", Feb 1953
- ↑ VOGUE FR, April 1938
- ↑ VOGUE FR, May 1939
- ↑ VOGUE FR, Dec. 1948
- ↑ THE NEW YORK TIMES, Published: February 21, 1932
- ↑ La Soierie de Lyon : Syndicat des fabricants de soieries de Lyon. Page 6.
- ↑ VOGUE US, Mar 1933
- ↑ VOGUE FR, Dec. 1938
- ↑ FEMINA 1945, Tuxedo Evening Wear by VERA BOREA, illustrated by GRUAU
- ↑ THE NEW YORK TIME, Published: June 5, 1932
- ↑ THE NEW YORK TIME, Published : May 21, 1933
- ↑ THE NEW YORK TIMES, Published : February 5, 1933, pg. X9
- ↑ The Guardian, October 16, 1959, pg. 7
- ↑ Harper’s Bazaar Magazine, October 1932
- ↑ VOGUE US, Oct 1932
- ↑ VOGUE US, March 1933
- ↑ Paris Modes, New York Times, 3 January 1932, pg. X11.
- ↑ Nonchalance Is Now Chic, New York Times, 22 May 1932, pg. X9.
- ↑ Paris Features Cotton, New York Times, 21 February 1932, pg. X13.
- ↑ Vera Borea Makes Plus-Fours for Boating-Metal Trimmings Are a Novelty, New York Times, 5 February 1933, pg. X9.
- ↑ Two-In-One, New York Times, 19 February 1933, pg. X9.
- ↑ Bathing Suits Undergoing Changes, New York Times, 14 January 1934, pg. X9.
- ↑ King Cotton Dresses His Attractive Subjects in Newest Smartly-Tailored Summer Styles, Los Angeles Times, 6 May 1935, pg. A6.
- ↑ Paris Sports Suits Show Novel Trend, New York Times, 7 August 1935, pg. 21.
- ↑ Dressing The Part, Manchester Guardian, 20 July 1936, pg. 6.
- ↑ By Wireless From Paris, New York Times, 30 January 1938, pg. 80.
- ↑ Double Bell Evening Silhouette Is Novel Idea of Paris Designer, New York Times, 4 August 1939, pg. 15.
- ↑ Summer Clothes In Paris, Manchester Guardian, 27 May 1940, pg. 3.
- ↑ Paris Sees Garb For Sportswomen, New York Times, 13 September 1946, pg. 5.
- ↑ Rainwear a la Francaise, The Guardian, 16 October 1959, pg. 7.