Professor Taylor and Dr McLoughlin's book tells a different story, drawing on testimony from leading international dress historians and curators to argue that in fact, despite Nazi imposed restrictions, Paris retained its position as Queen of Fashion. Their book reveals for the first time overseas fashion trade links out of Occupied France to Sweden, Brazil, Portugal, Denmark and Switzerland and as well as taking readers inside the salons of renowned couturiers such as Edward Molyneux and Robert Piguet, and into French Vogue and luxury silk production in Lyon.
This book examines the war time activities - finally unsuccessful - of Britain and America to wrest the leadership of world fashion away from Paris, each for reasons of national cultural and economic status.
By comparing extravagant Paris Occupation styles to the rationed Austerity fashions of the UK and USA, and to the fearful clothing shortages across all Nazi occupied countries, the book reveals a profound tension between the wartime world of luxury Paris fashion and the impoverished, stressful, everyday realities of life, in Britain and across war-torn Europe.