Charles Frederick Worth (13 October 1825 – 10 March 1895) was an English fashion designer who founded the House of Worth, one of the foremost fashion houses of the 19th and early 20th centuries. He is considered by many fashion historians to be the father of haute couture. Worth is also credited with revolutionising the business of fashion.

Established in Paris in 1858, his fashion salon soon attracted European royalty, and where they led monied society followed. An innovative designer, he adapted 19th-century dress to make it more suited to everyday life, with some changes said to be at the request of his most prestigious client Empress Eugénie. He was the first to replace the fashion dolls with live models in order to promote his garments to clients, and to sew branded labels into his clothing; almost all clients visited his salon for a consultation and fitting – thereby turning the House of Worth into a society meeting point. By the end of his career, his fashion house employed 1,200 people and its impact on fashion taste was far-reaching. The Metropolitan Museum of Art has said that his "aggressive self-promotion" earned him the title of the first couturier. Certainly, by 1870, his name was not just known in court circles, but appeared in women's magazines that were read by wide society. He is credited with inventing the hoop skirt and the bustle.

Worth raised the status of dressmaking so that the designer-maker also became arbiter of what women should be wearing. Writing on the history of fashion and, in particular, dandyism, in 2002, George Walden said: "Charles Frederick Worth dictated fashion in France a century and a half before Galliano".

Early life

thumb|160px|Charles Frederick Worth at age 30 – he had already begun to build his reputation in Paris as a designer

Charles Frederick Worth was born on 13 October 1825 in the Lincolnshire market town of Bourne to William and Ann Worth (). Some sources say he was their fifth and final child, and the only child other than his brother, William Worth III, to survive to maturity. Others say he was the family's third child. Charles' father was a solicitor – described as "dissolute" – and left his family in 1836 after ruining its finances, leaving his mother impoverished and without financial support.

At the age of 11, Charles was sent to work in a printer's shop. After a year, he moved to London to become an apprentice at the department store of Swan & Edgar in Piccadilly. Seven years later, Lewis & Allenby, another leading British textiles store, employed Worth. He arrived there speaking no French and with £5 in his pocket. He had also helped build the company's international reputation by exhibiting prize-winning designs at both The Great Exhibition of 1851 in London and the Exposition Universelle in Paris four years later.

Worth offered a new approach to the creation of couture dresses, offering a plethora of fabrics (some from his former employer Gagelin) and expertise in tailoring.

Worth also changed the dynamic of the relationship between customer and clothes maker. Where previously the dressmaker (invariably female) would visit the client's home for a one-to-one consultation, with the exception of Empress Eugénie clients generally attended Worth's salon in rue de la Paix for a consultation and it also became a social meeting point for society figures. His approach to marketing was also innovative – he was the first to use live mannequins in order to promote his gowns to clients. His wife was his early model in the 1850s, leading Lucy Bannerman to describe Vernet as the world's first professional model.

The fashion house had begun with 50 staff, but swelled over time to over 1,200 staff.

Clientele

thumb|180px|Empress Eugénie wearing a gown designed by Worth

Worth became Empress Eugénie's official dressmaker and ensured the majority of her orders for extravagant evening wear, court dresses, and masquerade costumes.

While the 1874 correspondent described Worth as "not a man to be afraid of if one has a liberal exchequer", it was implied that the couturier was not afraid to dictate to clients what they should wear: "Yet Mr Worth declares he has any amount of trouble with women – that they want to wear colours that don't become them and a superabundance of trimming that is far from good taste".

thumb|180px|left|"I told you it was a dress from Worth's. I know the look" – an 1875 cartoon by Bertall

Fashion innovations

Charles Frederick Worth's dresses were known for their lavish fabrics and trimmings and for incorporating elements from period dress. He created unique pieces for his most important customers, but also prepared a variety of designs, showcased by live models, that could then be tailored to the client's requirements in his workshop. Eventually, Worth abandoned the crinoline altogether, creating a straight gown shape without a defined waist that became known as the princess line.

Shorter hemline

Worth created a shorter hemline – a walking skirt – at the suggestion of Empress Eugénie, who enjoyed long walks but not long skirts. This was initially seen as too radical, even shocking, because it was at ankle length, but its practical benefits meant it was adopted over time.

thumb|160px|The House of Worth at 7 rue de la Paix became a meeting point for high society

Franco-Prussian War

The Second Empire boomed, alongside Worth's brand, until 1870, when the Prussians invaded France. Worth closed his business for a year; he was able to reopen a year later, but wartime meant he had difficulty finding clientele, staying in business with lines of new maternity, mourning, and sportswear. In common with other fashion designers, the House of Worth was affected by the financial downturn of the 1880s. He was celebrated enough to receive a variety of obituary notices. The notice in The Times said: "It is not a little singular that Worth...should take the lead in what is supposed to be a peculiarly French art". This was a claim disputed in British society magazine Queen, which put his rise to prosperity down to perseverance, intelligence and industry; this article was later reprinted in the San Francisco Call. Worth was also the first designer to label his clothing, sewing his name into each garment he produced - the first distinct brand logo on clothing.

Archives and commemoration

The Victoria and Albert Museum in London has an archive of Charles Worth designs, including both sketches and garments. In 1956, the House of Worth (by then amalgamated with the fashion house of Paquin) donated 23,000 drawings of dresses to the museum. Two years later, the V&A held a major retrospective to mark the centenary of the foundation of Charles Frederick Worth's business.

The Metropolitan Museum of Art also holds an archive of his work, including several evening gowns.

A Charles Worth Gallery opened in his home town at Bourne, Lincolnshire, containing a display of documents, photographs and artefacts at the Heritage Centre run by the Bourne Civic Society.

In 2025, the Petit Palais and Palais Galliera co-curated a retrospective of the House of Worth.

<gallery mode="packed" heights="200">

File:Ensemble MET 87.115 (2884).jpeg|Silk ensemble, 1862-1865

File:Winterhalter Elisabeth.jpg|1865 pink tulle ballgown created for Empress Elisabeth of Austria, as painted by Franz Xaver Winterhalter.

File:Charles Frederick Worth, Clara Mathews.jpg|Wedding dress trimmed with artificial pearls for wealthy American Clara Mathews, 1880

File:Imperial Russian court dress by Charles Frederick Worth, Paris, about 1888 01.jpg|Court dress designed for the Imperial Russian Court, about 1888. Green velvet and silver moiré.

File:Worth_Dress_view_2.jpg|Early 1900s court presentation dress from Moyse's Hall Museum – House of Worth was at the height of its success at the turn of the century.

</gallery>

References

Bibliography

  • Krick, Jessa. "Charles Frederick Worth (1825–1895) and The House of Worth." In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. (October 2004)
  • Worth, Gaston (1895). La Couture et la Confection des Vêtements de Femme. Paris, Imprimerie Chaix.
  • Worth Jean-Philippe (1928), A Century of Fashion. Boston, Little Brown and Cie.
  • Brooklyn Museum (1962), The House of Worth. New York, The Brooklyn Museum.
  • Museum of the City of New York (1982), The House of Worth, the gilded age 1860–1918. New York, Museum of the City of New York.
  • de la Haye Amy, Mendes Valerie D. (2014), The House of Worth: Portrait of an Archive 1890-1914. Londres, Victoria & Albert Museum.
  • DePauw Karen M., Jenkins Jessica D., Krass Michael (2015), The House of Worth: Fashion Sketches, 1916-1918. Mineola, Dover Publications & Litchfield Historical Society.

Further sources

  • Costumes designed by Charles Frédérick Worth at Chicago History Museum Digital Collections
  • Museum of the City of New York online exhibition of Worth couture garments
  • – Mid-1920s advertising booklet promoting Worth's role in 19th and early 20th century fashion.