Eugenia Sheppard
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Eugenia Sheppard (died 1984) was a American fashion writer and newspaper columnist for some 80 newspapers (including the Columbus Dispatch, New York Post, The Boston Post, and most notably, the New York Herald Tribune.
Sheppard was credited with having "revolutionized fashion reporting with her reports in the NYC Herald Tribune (1940–56)". Her syndicated column, Inside Fashion, made her the most influential fashion arbiter of the 1950s and 1960s. Her fashion columns at the New York Herald Tribune carried Joe Eula's illustrations. [1]
Contents |
[edit] Witicisms
- "It's all terribly cute, but like giving a girl candy when she craves steak." (on some designers' one-time predilection for buttons and bows)
- "Pretty sexy for a tall girl, but it may make a short one disappear altogether." (on a dress she was not crazy about)
- "Dessès has always been inspired by birds. I think it's time somebody came right out and told this nice guy to switch to biology or some other ology. Anything but birds." (On Jean Dessès' "dovetail look")
- "For the second time in history, women are in a dither about a young man, called Valentino. This time he is not a movie star, but a fashion designer from Rome." (In 1964 for the Boston Post about the designer Valentino)
[edit] Death
She was believed to be in her 80s when she died from cancer in New York City in 1984. She apparently left no immediate survivors.
[edit] Legacy
Eugenia Sheppard Award