Portrait of Capucine by Philipe Halsman, 1960 via
Portrait of Capucine by Philipe Halsman, 1960 via
Georges Dambier was born in 1925 and was one of the first fashion photographers to take models out of the studio and into the streets. While he was still building and perfecting his craft, Dambier was hired by Helene Lazareff, director of ELLE, the fashion magazine, who encouraged him and gave him his first assignment as a fashion photographer.
During his career Dambier photographed amongst others: Rita Hayworth, Gene Tierney, Errol Flynn, Jeanne Moreau, Jean Cocteau, ou Colette, mais aussi Bettina, Capucine and Suzy Parker.
Georges Dambier did not conform to the standard technique of taking fashion pictures, with models standing emotionless and seemingly indifferent to the camera. Instead, he showed models smiling, laughing and often in action. His models were surrounded by local people in a market place in Marrakech, or in a village in Corsica, or – and above all – in his beloved Paris.
Capucine for ELLE, Boulevard de la Madeleine, Paris, Georges Dambier, 1952 via
Suzy Parker by Georges Dambier via
Suzy Parker Shop Lanvin, Elle, Georges Dambier, 1952 via
1957 via
Sophie Litvak and little dog, Elle, 1952 via
Jean Barthet (1920–2000) was a French milliner who first rose to prominence in the 1950s as hat maker to Hollywood and French film stars, also designing hats for films such as The Young Girls of Rochefort.
He helped to define fashionable hat styles – including the bucket hat, pillbox hat and fedora – that predominated throughout the 1960s and collaborated with major couture houses.
Jean Barthet, Hat, photographed by Henry Clarke, 1955 via
Denise Sarrault in Jean Barthet Beret, photographed by Georges Saad, 1957 via
Capucine in Jean Barthet, Hat, photographed by Willy Maywald, 1950s via
Brigitte Bardot in Jean Barthet Hat, 1961 via