Original Sketch by Eric De Juan for Josephine Baker's Stage Costumes
- US NNFIT SC.239.1.4.1.2
- Unidad documental simple
Original Sketch by Eric De Juan for Josephine Baker's Stage Costumes
Baghsarian, Arsho
Baghsarian, Arsho
Parte deLucile, Ltd. records, 1910-1925
Shocking de Schiaparelli jeweled perfume bottle
Parte deShocking de Schiaparelli cosmetic products, circa 1940
View of bottle three-quarter view
Parte deShocking de Schiaparelli cosmetic products, circa 1940
Parte deShocking de Schiaparelli cosmetic products, circa 1940
Parte deInternational costume carte-de-visite photographs, 1860-1880
Hand-colored carte-de-visite depicting Neapolitan fishers, a man and a woman, with baskets.
[Hand-colored carte-de-visite depicting a man playing a bagpipe]
Parte deInternational costume carte-de-visite photographs, 1860-1880
Hand-colored carte-de-visite depciting a man playing a bagpipe. Full caption: "Stuart Inverness. When ordering duplicates please give the No."
Stuart of Inverness
Undergraduate catalogs, 1954-1955
Parte deAcademic Affairs records
FIT course catalog covering the 1954-1955 academic year.
Undergraduate catalogs, 1971-1972
Parte deAcademic Affairs records
Undergraduate catalogs, 1974-1975
Parte deAcademic Affairs records
Undergraduate catalogs, 1976-1977
Parte deAcademic Affairs records
Undergraduate catalogs, 1989-1991
Parte deAcademic Affairs records
US.NNFIT.SC.FITA.3.7.9.1.1.3.1
Parte deAcademic Affairs records
Parte deAcademic Affairs records
Challenge and Change: Fashion in the Industrial Age, May 11, 2013
Nancy White interview, 1979 March 14
Parte deAcademic Affairs records
White, Nancy
Fred Pomerantz interview, 1981 October 29 and November 5
Parte deAcademic Affairs records
Fred Pomerantz, long-time CEO and founder of Leslie Faye, discusses his start in the ready-to-wear business at age 10. Although he was briefly fired for insubordination, by age 18 he was running all of M.B. Kaufman. He then went into business with his brother, Michael. Pomerantz Brothers sold fur coats, and Fred talks colorfully of his sales methods. After enlisting as a teen during World War I, Fred attended a training camp. He talks about being the only Jewish person there and how, after being bullied to the point of being hospitalized, he came back and gained the respect of the rest of the camp. After a falling out with his brother ended their joint business endeavor, Fred founded Fred Pomerantz, Inc. and started in the dress business. That would lead him to found Silver Pom, for which he procured a factory in Mechanicsville, New York. Fred eventually moved to California to get into the retail business. He mentions proximity to Hollywood and tells the story of inviting 100 people to see him act in a Cary Grant film, only to find that his scene had been cut. Fred got into the retail business out west to little success and eventually returned to New York where he took a job with a piece goods house. Fred talks about the launch of Pommette and the realization of his dream to open Leslie Fay: a firm encompassing fashion, fashion shows, and annual advertisements in major women’s magazines. He tells a colorful anecdote about Dorothy Dean of AMC, and mentions his column in Women’s Wear entitled, “If I Was the King of Garment Town.” Fred goes on to say that Leslie Fay was the first company to produce petite dresses, and details his hard policies on sales. Leslie Fay went public in 1962 and Fred began building management up and increasing staff, while ensuring the maintenance of exceptional quality control. Fred also discusses two presidents of his company: Zachary Buchalter and John Pomerantz, his son.
Pomerantz, Fred