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Collections

Margit Fellegi
Woman's Ensemble (Swimsuit and Jacket)1954

Not on view
White polka-dot two-piece outfit with open jacket and sleeveless top, dots in pink, black, yellow, and green, displayed on a dress form
White cotton ensemble displayed on a headless mannequin, consisting of a swing jacket and matching top with multicolored polka dots in pink, black, yellow, and green; jacket features hot pink piping along the front edges.
Designer
Margit Fellegi
United States, 1903 - 1975
Design House
Cole of California
United States, California, Los Angeles, founded 1925
Title
Woman's Ensemble (Swimsuit and Jacket)
Place Made
United States, California
Date Made
1954
Medium
Cotton plain weave, printed
Dimensions
Length (a) Bathing suit center back length): 19 3/4 in. Length (b) Jacket center back length): 30 in.
Credit Line
Gift of Doris Raymond/The Way We Wore
Accession Number
M.2006.210.1a-b
Classification
Costumes
Collecting Area
Costume and Textiles
Curatorial Notes

California women’s fashion made its strongest mark in swimwear. Two of that industry’s giants, Cole of California and Catalina, were located in Southern California, along with many of their smaller competitors. Bathing suit designs closely reflected the playful styles of the era, and some even came with coordinating accessories for poolside comfort, as in Margit Fellegi’s cheerful polka-dot swimsuit and jacket ensemble for Cole. By the late 1940s a more curvaceous female body had emerged as the fashionable ideal, and swimsuits became more heavily constructed, architectural, and dresslike. Flexible Lastex yarn (a rubber core wound with fiber) and firm, fusible materials used for suits’ inner corsetry allowed women’s swimsuit-clad bodies to be molded into an idealized silhouette. However, the iconoclastic Rudi Gernreich used wool knits without understructures to create suits that clung daringly close to the bodies of unfettered wearers.



(California Design, 1930–1965: "Living in a Modern Way," 2011-12)

Selected Bibliography
  • Kaplan, Wendy, ed. Living in a Modern Way: California Design, 1930-1965. Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 2013.
Selected Exhibition History
  • California Design, 1930–1965: "Living in a Modern Way". October 1, 2011 - June 3, 2012
  • California Design, 1930–1965: "Living in a Modern Way". October 1, 2011 - June 3, 2012