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The majority of the archive is not conveniently ordered, dated nor indeed numbered. There are page numbers on some of the documents but unfortunately the majority are missing. One key date is stamped on one sheet with 18th June 1952, however there are also some photographs which were included with the archive and look a lot older.
The very nature of their use of these catalogues of course was probably for the stores grand opening and then maybe remained forever forgotten and tucked away in a draw for nearly 60 years. There are a wide variety of different display ‘vehicles’ which makes it quite difficult to precisely decipher what type of small retailer would be attracted to the wide variet
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The largest part of the archive contains a series of catalogue pages with individual images of fixtures with descriptions of how to use headlining the pages. Names such as ‘Nouveau Presente Soutien-Gorge’ and ‘Composez vous-memes vos Fonds d’Etalages avec les Grilles Mobiles ….offering 50 different positions. Somehow I could not help feeling that they do resemble so kind of Medieval torture implements.
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It is difficult to image that these female forms with impossibly thin waists and startled child mannequins were ever appealing in our sanitised, excessive, environmentally aware, Western 21st Century however it would be interesting to see some original photographs of stores using these items should I happened upon them.
The photographs of the children seem somehow much older than the rest of the archive, some are labelled Siegal as in the one below, but not all.
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The piece de resistance of the archive is a photograph of Marquisette in Amplepuis in Rhone. I have very little information about this store at this stage in my research however it is clearly a women’s wear store and probably quite notable as photographs of historic European store windows seem very difficult to come by.
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