Christian Dior Pinstripe Vest Suit by John Galliano (SS 2006)
Christian Dior Pinstripe Vest Suit by John Galliano (SS 2006)
Christian Dior Pinstripe Vest Suit by John Galliano (SS 2006)
Christian Dior Pinstripe Vest Suit by John Galliano (SS 2006)
Christian Dior Pinstripe Vest Suit by John Galliano (SS 2006)
Christian Dior Pinstripe Vest Suit by John Galliano (SS 2006)

Christian Dior Pinstripe Vest Suit by John Galliano (SS 2006)

Regular price£1,123.00
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Curator's Note

From Christian Dior SS 2006 under Galliano, look 33. The lambskin leather appliqué and Dior-embossed buckle straps at the back recast classic suiting as something more confrontational - tailoring with an edge.

Description

  • Two-piece suit comprising a tailored vest and matching mid-rise trousers in black pinstripe wool
  • Vest with lambskin leather appliqué and three Dior embossed buckle straps at the back
  • Trousers with matching leather appliqué along the side seams
  • Vest featured on the Christian Dior SS 2006 runway, look 33

Size & Measurements

  • Vest labelled FR 38, trousers labelled FR 36 (please refer to measurements for accurate fit)
  • Measurements are taken with the garment laid flat:

Waistcoat:

  • Chest: 43cm
  • Waist: 38cm

Trousers:

  • Waist: 38cm
  • Hips: 50cm
  • Length (outer seam): 106cm

Excellent

Garment is in outstanding condition with no or minimal signs of wear. Any flaws present are negligible and do not detract from the overall appearance or integrity of the piece.

Christian Dior

Christian Dior was born in Granville, Normandy in 1905 and came to fashion after running an art gallery in Paris where he showed work by Salvador Dalí, Man Ray and Jean Cocteau. He opened his own couture house in 1946 with the backing of French textile magnate Marcel Boussac. His first collection, presented in February 1947 and quickly dubbed the New Look by the press, introduced rounded shoulders, a cinched waist, padded hips and a full skirt that fell to mid-calf. The collection was immediately controversial, as fabric rationing had only recently ended and the extravagance of the silhouette provoked fierce debate across Europe and America, but it nonetheless transformed the direction of postwar fashion within a season. The Bar Suit, the central piece of that debut collection, has been reinterpreted by every subsequent creative director of the house. Dior produced twenty-two couture collections before dying of a heart attack in Italy in 1957. The house has since been led by Yves Saint Laurent, Marc Bohan, Gianfranco Ferré, John Galliano, Raf Simons and Maria Grazia Chiuri, each reinterpreting the founding silhouette for their own era. The Christian Dior Museum, opened in his childhood home in Granville in 1997, holds a permanent collection of his work and archive.

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