30 Avenue Montaigne
Enter the heart of 30 Avenue Montaigne, this “packed little beehive” where the Christian Dior legend was born 75 years ago!
Two large spaces dedicated to sales “occupy the whole surface area of the presentation rooms on the floor below.” Here, displayed on hangers, were dresses from previous collections, or prototypes that were incomplete at the time of the presentation.
Sales label.
Fashion is defined by its constant need for renewal. Each season invariably renders the previous one unfashionable. In those days, couture houses did not conserve the prototypes presented in their shows, unlike today. Six months after the collection was presented, they were either offered to the models at extremely reduced prices or discounted for certain clients.
Invoice of a customer with a reduction applied, 1947.
In 1987, following the Christian Dior exhibition organized by the Musée des Arts de la Mode, an archive service was established. It has continued to grow and today employs a dozen people who ensure the preservation and the circulation of this heritage. All the clothes and accessories, as well as the photographs and documents, are preciously conserved, while an active acquisition policy contributes to enhancing the collection, building an ever more complete record of the work of Christian Dior and his successors.
Nuit de Juin dress, Haute Couture Spring-Summer 1954, Muguet line. Collection Dior Héritage, Paris.
Versailles pump, Christian Dior by Roger Vivier, 1959. Collection Dior Héritage, Paris.
Enter the heart of 30 Avenue Montaigne, this “packed little beehive” where the Christian Dior legend was born 75 years ago!