Charles Frederick Worth was an English fashion designer credited with revolutionizing the business of fashion
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Charles Frederick Worth was an English fashion designer credited with revolutionizing the business of fashion
Charles Frederick Worth born at
While working at Gagelin, he fell in love with Marie Vernet, one of the company’s models, and married her. They had two sons. His wife was a constant source of support and played a major role in helping him establish his successful business.
He suffered from several health problems during his later years and died of pneumonia at the age of 69 on March 10, 1895.
Charles Frederick Worth was born on October 13, 1825, in Lincolnshire in England, to William and Ann Worth. He was couple’s one of the only two children who survived to maturity.
He hailed from a family of lawyers and attorneys. His solicitor father was, however, an alcoholic who ruined the family finances and abandoned his wife and children in 1836. His mother was now forced to clean houses to support the family, and Charles too was forced to find work despite his young age.
Aged 11, Charles became an apprentice in a printer’s shop. A year later, he moved to London and found work as a bookkeeper for the yard goods firm of Swan & Edgar. Here he began learning about textiles as the company supplied ladies with fabric yardage that would be taken to a dressmaker to create gowns and other garments.
Charles Frederick Worth moved to Lewis and Allenby, famous London silk merchants, where he became more aware about fashion and textiles. Blessed with a creative mind, he was also drawn to art galleries where he observed the clothing of past eras.
In 1846, he moved to Paris, France. He was a pauper and spoke no French, yet he was determined to make it big in the fashionable city. After struggling initially, he was appointed as a sales assistant at Gagelin-Opigez & Cie, a prestigious Parisian firm that sold silk fabrics to the court dressmakers.
It was at Gagelin that Worth began sewing dresses. His simple yet elegant designs caught the attention of the store’s clients and his employers let him open a dress department in the store which became popular in no time.
Over a period of time his creations helped to expand Gagelin’s business. In addition, he displayed prize-winning garments at both The Great Exhibition of 1851 in London and the Exposition Universelle in Paris four years later which helped to build Gagelin’s international reputation.
Worth requested a partnership in Gagelin but was refused. Undaunted, he broke off from the company and decided to launch his own business. He teamed up with a young Swedish business partner, Otto Gustaf Bobergh, and the duo set up a business called Worth and Bobergh in 1858.
Charles Frederick Worth founded the House of Worth, a French house of high fashion that specialized in haute couture and ready-to-wear clothes. One of the foremost fashion houses of the 19th and early 20th centuries, it boasted of a prominent clientele that included Empress Eugenie and leading performers of the day like Sarah Bernhardt, Lillie Langtry and Jenny Lind.