Fashion Illustration archives
2023 - 2024
Providence, RI
New York, NY
Fashion Illustration Archives
This research is born from the oral history project and forthcoming book, Design According to Leo Narducci.
The Leo Narducci archive offers a glimpse into the fashion world in which Leo’s life and career in fashion serves as a vehicle guiding the reader through the rise of the Young American designers, the American sportswear evolution on Seventh Avenue and its garment industry history throughout the 1960s and 1970s. Leo's story and the story of his contemporaries become the connective dots to a time in fashion history seldom told. Deep dives into fashion archives, including Parsons School of Design’s archives at The New School Archives + Special Collections.
Continuing my decade-long fashion history project documenting untold stories of the mid-1960s through mid 1970s, I’m diving into the mentoring relationship of Seventh Avenue fashion designers with fashion students. Designers had strong ties with Parsons from studio crits to the Annual Parsons Collection fashion shows working closely with students as they began their careers in all aspects of design. Design critics + mentors working with student work shown include Leo Narducci, Stan Herman, Oscar de la Renta, Norman Norell, Calvin Klein, Donna Karan + Chester Weinberg, among so many more. Resaerch incuded student croquis (fashion sketches made by design students showing models wearing their designs), some including the fabric swatches + diagrams for pattern making. So much more to show is on the way . . .
Leo Narducci has crafted an extensive and innovative career in fashion for over sixty years to craft modern looks for the American woman, both timeless and unique. Growing up in his parent's garment factory in Brockton, Massachusetts, Narducci went on to graduate from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1960 and moved to New York City. Starting out at Loomtog's, then designing for the label Guy D by Leo Narducci. He quickly made an impression on the fashion world, winning one of several 1965 Coty Fashion Awards with a new group of young designers changing fashion. In 1966, after meeting fashion entrepreneur Ben Shaw, he launched his own label, Narducci, Inc., a division of Geoffrey Beene, Inc.
Seldom are we given the opportunity to sit with someone and hear them speak about the lived experiences that made them who they are today. Interviews from Narducci's friends and colleagues include fashion and textile designers, illustrators, historians, buyers, stylists, museum curators, journalists, and former editors of Glamour, Harper’s Bazaar, and Mademoiselle Magazine. This part of fashion history is seemingly told through the more famous names of its day, however it omits many artists and designers who critically connected and contributed to the fashion world, breaking boundaries and paving paths for the creative innovations of today.
"What stands out about the young designers of the 1965 Coty Fashion Awards is one word – Invention. They tuned into the mood of the country and people were ready for them. The clothing wasn’t something you just put on your back, it gave you a feeling that enhanced you from the inside. ... They were a fresh bunch of kids with wonderful ideas. The most wonderful was Leo – besides being an absolutely enchanting person, he’s incredibly talented with a sensibility one doesn’t find very often in any one designer. When you walked into a room wearing a Leo Narducci, heads turned and you would be asked, “Who are you wearing?” He remains tuned into the times, now as he was then, capturing the moment."
- RACHEL 'RAY' CRESPIN, FASHION EDITOR, Harper's Bazaar | Vogue | Esquire
"Leo was making clothes that the stores wanted to sell and people wanted to wear. It’s really that simple when the clothes are easy and accessible. You know, Leo didn’t get enormous amounts of publicity. Instead of making the scene just to get articles written about him in the press, he was in his studio making the clothes."
- JULIAN TOMCHIN, TEXTILE DESIGNER
"Leo Roars was my first designer feature written in WWD (Women's Wear Daily). People loved that article and it’s because of Leo and his personality, warm, and charisma. That needs to come through. Personalities add depth to any experience. He wasn’t afraid of color and pattern either. A designer like Leo understood the modern woman and made clothes that were not prescribed and at their core conveyed motion. He was the first designer I ever met who believed clothes could be high style and affordable. "
- KI HACKNEY, FASHION JOURNALIST | AUTHOR
“As a designer, my focus wasn’t necessarily related to age or income, it was about capturing a youthful feeling. My intuition about fashion has always been my key. I kept an eye on what was happening and what was changing outside the design studio and still believe that fashion meets with function. I was interested in dressing every woman, not only a select few who could afford my designs under the guise of couture. I realized that wealth didn’t determine access to good designer clothes. Income shouldn't limit a woman from a well-made closet."
- LEO NARDUCCI