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Gloria Smythe – an Iconic Australian Designer, Author, Illustrator and Design Teacher.

Part 1 – Trade Patternmaker to the Royal Family

Literally unknown among the plethora of Australian Designers who today mark their name to luxury brands and perfumes, 79 year old Gloria Smythe (Mortimer Dunn) is one Australian who stands testimony to the female emancipation of our time and is an aspirational role model to all women in this country.

In 1952 following the completion of her Art Scholarship and five years teaching Design at East Sydney Technical College, Sydney born Gloria Smythe sailed alone to London and visited the major Art Colleges and London couturier. The British Council had organized for Gloria to view all the London Fashion collections. She worked hard, studied at the London School of Fashion and joined Horrockses Fashion as an Assistant and Patternmaker
to the Head Designer, John Tullis. Horrockses Fashions were renowned for their cotton dresses but their workroom did justice to collections of Resort wear, Daywear, Evening Wear and Haute Couture. From 1952-1956 in her elegant workroom in the Earl of Suffolk’s former house in Hanover Square, Gloria assisted John Tullis through pattern making to create dresses for the Queens tour of Australia and Nigeria, for the Duchess of Kent and Princess Alexandra’s Canadian tour and for Princess Margaret’s Caribbean tour.

Gloria Smythe, Horocks
Gloria invents the multi-size pattern


In her pursuit of excellence Gloria was inspired by the classic designers of the periods. Dior, Jacque Fath, Belanciaga and Chanel were of particular interest, as was the Interstoff textile festival and her cultural visits to the many museums and art galleries as she traveled the world. Gloria states, “The Interstoff Textile and Gaido Garment Trade Show were the ones I looked forward to the most.”

It was Gloria’s designs that were photographed by London photographers Norman arkinson and John French and seen in the pages of Vogue and Harpers Bazaar.

Gloria had met English journalist and photographer, Bernard Mortimer Dunn in Australia in 1951 and on the Christmas Eve of 1954 they were married in London.

Over the years at Horrockses, Gloria also assisted to develop styles that were synonymous with the Ready to Wear of today that were exported to America, Europe and Australia.

On their return to Australia her career took a twist away from couture and into swimwear and resort wear. Gloria freelanced for some years whilst she was writing her books and continued her passionate work as a teacher at East Sydney Technical College.

In her pursuit of excellence Gloria Smythe has always chosen to share her knowledge with those around her, working as a Teacher at East Sydney Technical College (now the Art School). Apart from the three years Gloria spent in London, she has demonstrated her commitment to the education of our youth since 1947. Gloria shared her love of textiles, weaving and crafts with the students and authored four Fashion texts on patternmaking,
fashion making, fashion design and children’s pattern making. Over the years, Gloria was the only teacher who had worked as a Designer for international companies, both in Australia and overseas.

Gloria states, “I returned to teaching because I wanted to share the experience I had gained overseas with my students.”

It was Gloria who introduced French Drapery and Trade Patternmaking to the curriculum and was the pioneer of the first ever “multisize” patterns in the country. Not realizing she needed to copyright her idea, Gloria’s innovation was adopted in a similar form by the major patternmaking companies and can be seen today all over the world.

Gloria’s traditional Chanel inspired suit, Jackie Kennedy Style Dress and Hollywood Reversible Swimsuit was the innovative lift out in Woman’s Day Magazines in the early 60’s.

Gloria is recognized today in the International Authors and Writers Who’s Who in Cambridge, England.

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Melbourne Cup Carnival Fever 2008

September 10th 2007 15:35
Whilst Sydney's spring carnival racing may have been bought to a standstill, the Stylist whose Celebrity was voted one 1 of 9 best dressed at the Melbourne Cup, this very blogger shares her tips as she prepares the 2008 VRC Ambassadors wardrobes for this years Melbourne Cup Racing Carnival...

What’s In


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Who's Hot for Summer 2008

September 7th 2007 16:15
Who's Hot for Summer 08

Forget the unwearable items you see strutting down some fashion runways, european fashion speaks to the sillhouette and moves us back to the real aim of fashion - expressing ourselves AND flattering our body shape


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Confessions of the cloth

August 27th 2007 13:02
How long did it take you to get dressed today? I had planned what to wear today well in advance of tucking myself into bed last night. Of course, nothing ever goes to plan. I had chosen a Kinki Gerlinki tent dress with puff sleeves, made of alternating thin stripes of red and blue wool. It has Impressionist style tapestry flowers over it. Oh man, I love it. I usually wear it with a black cardigan, as the dress is enough on its own, but today I was just not content with said cardigan. I then spent the next half an hour trying to figure out what to cover my arms and their goosebumps with (I eventually settled for a black fitted spencer underneath). Trying to sleep through the wardrobe bangs and groans of despair, my boyfriend was witness to my little "episode". He was also witness to a much more panicked, and altogether (with the benefit of hindsight, of course) pathetic case of 'I have nothing to wear' a week earlier. This one lasted an hour, and as a result, I was late to university. Yes, readers, I was freaking out about what to wear to university.

When I admitted to a friend the shames of my shallow life, she confided that she too has days where she feels so uncomfortable she wants to "get off the train and go home". Her self-conscientiousness is also a result of the perils of attending a city university (but to be fair, she goes to a university dedicated to art theory, history and practice


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Silver Springs

August 17th 2007 03:42
Initially metallic fashion appeared to me to be something of a transient trend. For some reason to me, if something is shiny and popular, then it will fade fast. It seems however, that silvers and golds may one day be the epitome of noughties fashion. It has survived several seasons now, and continues to make an appearance on the catwalk. In a decade’s time, will we look back and cringe at how much glimmer made its way into our wardrobe at the start of the 21st century?

For now, there are a plethora of options available to those who can carry off some glam metal. For the more formal wear, for cocktail parties and nights out clubbing, Filippa K amongst many, have created some very cute mini dresses in shiny fabrics like the one below.

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Unraveling the weird!

July 23rd 2007 05:24
"What the hell was that designer thinking?"

"Who the hell would wear that?!"

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More Mouret

July 5th 2007 08:28
Only a few posts ago I was bemoaning the lack Roland Mouret in my life after that galaxy dress (worn rather well by Demi Moore). But Style.com has informedme that he has returned, view their article here.

And here's my favourites of the aforementioned collection


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Fashion blog diet

June 19th 2007 00:11
Fashion blogging, like most other blogging provides a forum for otherwise unqualified opinionators, like me. That is, except in the case of The Sartorialist whose blog has been listed by Time as one of the top 100 design influences. His images appear on Style.com and in Vanity Fair and his pithy comments and street shots are indeed a cultural record. He balances the male and female shots and favours the quirky or unconventional, those who don’t just follow trends but help create them. And his journeys to Berlin and Scandinavia, Milan and Paris provide a travel-poor Sydney-ite with the vicarious pleasure of the international flaneur.

The Sartorialist blog
From Thesartorialist.blogspot.com/

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VivienneWestwood.com
From Viviennewestwood.com


After visiting the Victoria and Albert exhibition which travelled to the National Gallery in Canberra a few years ago, I’ve been obsessed with Vivienne Westwood. It’s not just that she’s sixty and has a beautiful thirty-year-old Italian lover, although that does impress me, and it’s not just that she’s been an inspiration for generations of fashionistas, mostly it’s because for Westwood, fashion is thought


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One of the most striking models of the contemporary brat pack is Jessica Stam, a statuesque Canadian who has the kind of natural physique required for catwalk shows. She is indeed long and slender but there is nothing painful about the proportions of her legs or the position of her clavicle. My general rule is that if the knee is wider than the thigh there’s a problem but Stam is in proportion as you can see from the Stella McCartney show.

Jessica Stam in McCartney
From Style.com

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Black is invariably the new black

June 5th 2007 23:49
Audrey Hepburn in Givenchy
From photobucket.com


Although Coco Chanel was really the first to bring the black dress into the everyday wardrobe of the modern woman, its place was indeed cemented with Hepburn’s appearance in Givenchy during Breakfast at Tiffany (see Sisi's post) last year for more on that dress


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Ethical Fashion: Oxy-moron?

June 5th 2007 02:43
In this environmentally conscious age the preoccupation with organics and ethics has even spread to fashion. Ideally the result would be greater choice for the morally minded style maven but that is not the case just yet. These shoes are from a UK site called Bourgeois Boheme, servicing the vegan party shoe market and doing rather well although their contradictory name confuses me a little.

Vegan shoes
From bboheme.com

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Balenciaga, Vernacular Fashion

May 31st 2007 00:33
Gemma Ward Balenciaga
From Style.com
After using Balenciaga as an example in my white shirt post I remembered what a stand-out collection Nicolas Ghesquière produced for Fall 2007 collection and I was reminded by our very own (why are we so patriotic when it comes to beautiful people) Gemma Ward wearing Balenciaga at Cannes.

Balenciaga Dress
From Style.com

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Bottega Veneta

May 23rd 2007 23:48
Bottega Veneta jacket
Exquisitely detailed leather jacket


This is a brand to which I was largely indifferent before stumbling across some of their pieces on net-a-porter.com which is incidentally where these images come from. Their recent string of advertisements in British and American Vogue also helped. A certain wistful nostalgia resonates through the garments while an accompanying attention to detail and quirk of cut pulls them out of the average everyday


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