Friday 23 January 2015

New Year Honours - Damehood for fashion pioneer Mary Quant


Fashion designer Mary Quant, who is widely credited with creating the mini skirt, has spoken of her delight at being made a Dame. 

The 80-year-old, listed on Cabinet Office documents under her full name Barbara Mary Plunket Greene, was given the honour for services to British fashion in the Queen’s New Year Honours list. 

She said: “I am absolutely delighted to have been awarded this terrific honour. 

“It is extremely gratifying that my work in the fashion industry has been recognised and acknowledged in such a significant way.” 

Dame Mary, who lives at Farley Green, near Peaslake, was one of the most influential figures in the fashion scene of the 1960s. 

She began experimenting with shorter hemlines in the late 1950s, culminating in the creation of one of the defining fashions of the following decade. 

Earlier this year Dame Mary, who named the skirt after her favourite make of car, recalled its “feeling of freedom and liberation”. 

She said: “It was the girls on [London’s] King’s Road who invented the mini. I was making clothes which would let you run and dance, and we would make them the length the customer wanted. 

“I wore them very short and the customers would say, ‘shorter, shorter’.” 

Born in south-east London, Mary Quant was the daughter of two Welsh school teachers. She gained a diploma in Art Education at Goldsmith’s College, where she met her husband Alexander Plunket Greene, before she was taken on as an apprentice to a milliner. 

She began making her own clothes and in 1955 opened Bazaar, a boutique on the King’s Road in Chelsea. 

Her Damehood comes almost 50 years after she was appointed an OBE in 1966.

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