Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1980s American Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1980s Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
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20th Century American Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1970s Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1970s American Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
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1980s American Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
Late 20th Century American Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1970s Unknown Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1970s Unknown Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1980s American Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1980s American Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1990s American Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1980s American Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1980s Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1980s American Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1990s American Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1980s American Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1980s American Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1980s American Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1980s American Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1980s American Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1970s American Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1970s American Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1970s American Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1980s Unknown Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
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Early 2000s Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1970s French Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1990s Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1990s Italian Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1980s British Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1990s Italian Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
21st Century and Contemporary American Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
Early 2000s Italian Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
1990s Italian Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
Early 2000s French Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
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1980s French Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
Early 2000s Italian Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns
Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns For Sale on 1stDibs
How Much are Vintage Mary Mcfadden Fortuny Gowns?
Mary McFadden for sale on 1stDibs
Less could have been expected from a well-bred society girl like Mary McFadden, who stepped out of the safe confines of the haut monde to create iconic designs for evening dresses, jackets, skirts and other items inspired by ancient and ethnic cultures and traditions. Fashion, in fact, was not initially on her agenda.
“I fell into it backwards,” she told the New York Times in 1979.
Born in New York but raised on a cotton plantation in Memphis, Tennessee, McFadden spent a few months at the Traphagen School of Fashion in 1956 and moved on to study sociology and anthropology at Columbia University. Afterward, she spent a short period of time in public relations at Christian Dior during the early 1960s, but she was unsure exactly what would lie ahead for her. McFadden decided to relocate to South Africa with her first husband, who oversaw production of the De Beers mines. While there, she began to design her own clothing — tunics that featured African prints, made of silk she’d found in Madagascar — because she couldn’t find anything that suited her.
In 1970, following two divorces, McFadden returned to her native New York City and was offered a job as an editor at Vogue magazine. Her colleagues admired the sophisticated garments she made in South Africa and had been wearing to work, and the magazine staffers pleaded to feature her designs, which meant she’d need to go into business in order to make them available to readers. So, in 1973, McFadden took the jump, soon becoming known for refreshing kimono-shaped jackets and richly colored pleated dresses that evoke the freedom of a Greek chiton — a far cry from the dull routine office attire for working women at the time. A collection of jewelry followed, and in 1977, McFadden patented her “marii” fabric, a pleated synthetic charmeuse that fell “like liquid gold on the body, like Chinese silk.”
In 1976, McFadden won her first Coty American Fashion Critics’ Award, and a few years later, she entered the Coty Award Hall of Fame. While her business shuttered in the early 2000s, the beloved designer’s timeless styles endure.
Shop vintage Mary McFadden day dresses, accessories and jewelry on 1stDibs today.
Finding the Right Evening-dresses for You
With entire museum exhibitions dedicated to examining fashion designers and their creations, we’re finally recognizing that costuming is art. Evening dresses over time have conveyed specific statements about social class, position and beliefs. Fashion is a powerful means of self-expression, and sophisticated vintage evening dresses and gowns by our favorite couturier play no small role in making us feel wonderful but, perhaps more importantly, making us feel like ourselves.
In the 16th century, dresses and gowns were so important that England's Queen Elizabeth I defined rules about what dresses women could wear — guidance included long skirts and fitted bodices. Forward-thinking designers have responded to this history.
Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel reimagined traditionally masculine garments for feminine shapes, and her elegant evening dresses and gowns promoted comfort and grace in women’s wear that had been dominated in the previous century by layers of fabric. Christian Dior's gowns celebrated luxury and femininity in the late 1940s — and gave to women the gift of glamour they’d lost in the miserable years of the war. French fashion designer Yves Saint Laurent introduced innovative and highly coveted dress designs in the 1960s while at the same time challenging sexist stereotypes about which members of society could wear tuxedos.
Works by unconventional British designer John Galliano — featured in houses like Givenchy and Dior — redefined limits that dressmakers faced in terms of material, construction and vision during the late 20th century. From his embroidered absinthe-green Oscars gown for actress Nicole Kidman to the iconic sleeveless Dior newspaper dress that Sex and the City’s Carrie Bradshaw made famous, Galliano’s intricate and multifaceted work is reliably collectible and newsworthy
Today’s designers target an increasingly broad audience with their boundary-crossing work, and their tendency to play off of each other’s ideas means that every walk down the runway is also a walk through an entire history of fashion design and dress craftsmanship.
Whether you gravitate toward backless maxi dresses or silk charmeuse gowns by Alexander McQueen or embellished, ruffled floral-print designs by Chloe or Versace, there is an extraordinary collection of vintage and designer evening dresses and gowns waiting for you on 1stDibs.