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  1. Satin evening dress, Madeleine Vionnet, 1932 – 34, France. Museum no. T.203&A-1973. © Victoria and Albert Museum, London. The couture house was forced to close during the First World War, but Vionnet re-opened in 1918, moving to larger premises on 50 Avenue Matignon, Paris.

  2. Vionnet y las Mujeres Modernas: Su Contribución a la Liberación del Corsé Madeleine Vionnet jugó un papel crucial en la transformación de la moda femenina a principios del siglo XX, contribuyendo significativamente a la liberación de las mujeres de las restricciones del corsé.

  3. Vionnet evening gown, silk chiffon, c.1932 (RISD Museum) The bias of a textile runs at 45 degrees to both the warp and weft threads. Alongside Coco Chanel , Vionnet is credited with a move away from stiff, formalised clothing to sleeker, softer clothes.

  4. Her devotion to the figure and sensitivity to fabric, combined with her virtuosic patternmaking abilities, resulted in some of the most discreetly revolutionary designs of the 1920s and ’30s. This dress from her spring 1931 collection evidences her timeless synthesis of comfort and elegance.

  5. This object consists of 2 parts. Satin evening dress and petticoat, designed and made by Madeleine Vionnet, Paris, 1932-1934. Long flared evening dress of pale flesh pink satin. It has short box shaped sleeves, which are skillfully cut in one with the front piece of the dress.

  6. 8 de abr. de 2014 · Madeleine Vionnet: Virtuoso. This label, direct from our Special Exhibitions gallery, describes the incredible work of Madeleine Vionnet: Some of the most awe-inspiring garments of the interwar years were created in the hand-sewing ateliers of Madeleine Vionnet. Under the guidance of Georgette Petit, former premiere for Coco Chanel, the Vionnet ...

  7. 23 de ago. de 2015 · PARIS, France — It seems extraordinary, looking back now, that the name of Madeleine Vionnet, the re-creator of the seemingly lost technique of cutting fabric on the bias, had virtually disappeared from the pantheon of great fashion design innovators until John Galliano rediscovered the cut and resurrected the designer’s name in the 1990s.