Long before there was Anna Wintour, there was Jessica Daves, who served as Diana Vreeland’s direct predecessor as editor-in-chief of Vogue. Something of an enigma in the fashion world, Daves nonetheless established the recognizable Vogue brand, mixing high and low culture in the Eisenhower-Kennedy years to capture a dynamic, still innocent time of transition. Now fashion historian Rebecca C. Tuite and Thames & Hudson have captured it and her in “1950s in Vogue: The Jessica Daves Years, 1952-1962” ($95, 256 pages).
0
Facebook
Twitter
Pinterest
LinkedIn
Email
More from Staff
THE CONSTANT GARDENER
Botanical celebrates Monet’s floral works By Georgette Gouveia He was, of course,...
Read More