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  1. Gallery FIT. March 5 – March 30, 2019. Share using #TraphagenSchool on Twitter and Instagram . The Traphagen School of Fashion played an important role in the development of American fashion. Largely forgotten today, the school opened in 1923 in New York City and trained over 28,000 students.

  2. Traphagen School of Fashion was an art and design school in operation from 1923 to 1991, and was located at 1680 Broadway in New York City. The school was founded and directed by Ethel Traphagen Leigh (1883–1963) with a focus on the foundational concepts of the American design movement.

  3. The Traphagen School: Fostering American Fashion explores the legacy of one of the first institutions dedicated to educating fashion industry professionals in New York City. The impact of the school, in operation from 1923-1991, will be explored through an introduction to founder Ethel Traphagen, the main philosophies of the school, and its ...

  4. The Traphagen School: Fostering American Fashion celebrates the schools lasting influence on the fashion industry by examining the history of the school and its design philosophies — which included design-by-adaptation and experimentation — as well as its innovative approach to marketing.

  5. Ethel Traphagen founds The Traphagen School of Cooperative Fashion in New York City. The school is renamed The Traphagen School of Fashion shortly after its opening. 1932: “American Fashions for American Women” Campaign.

  6. The Historic Costume & Textiles Collection is a scholarly and artistic resource of apparel and textile material culture. The 11,500+ holdings encompass a range of three dimensional objects such as textiles and articles of clothing and accessories for men, women, and children, including national dress costume, from the mid-18th century to ...

  7. 29 de ago. de 2014 · Ethel Traphagen, was a fashion designer who is credited with introducing shorts and slacks into American women's fashion. In 1995, the Friends of the Historic Costume & Textiles Collection purchased five 19th century garments from the collection of the Traphagen School of Design.