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Angele Delanghe

Angele Delanghe
Angele Delanghe.jpg
Angele Delanghe, c1945
Born Belgium
Died 27 May 1971
Schruns, Austria
Occupation Fashion designer
Notable credit(s) Member of Incorporated Society of London Fashion Designers

Angele Delanghe (also sometimes Angèle Delanghe) was a Belgian fashion designer based in London who ran an eponymous label from the late 1930s to the mid 1960s and also produced couture designs for the West End department store Fortnum & Mason.

Delanghe was born in Belgium and came to the UK in 1914, at the outbreak of World War I, as a refugee. She presented her first collection in London in 1939. While wartime interrupted the activities of all London's couture houses, fashion went on and the influential British Vogue editor Audrey Withers was described as being among her early fans. Delanghe was among the earlier members of the Incorporated Society of London Fashion Designers (IncSoc), joining in 1945 but withdrawing two years later due, reportedly, to financial difficulties.

Delanghe was known for her soft tailoring and feminine gowns – particularly romantic eveningwear and wedding dresses. At a January 1947 fashion show – in which she shared space and billing with fellow IncSoc member Charles Creed – Delanghe featured draped and brocaded evening gowns with stiffened hems slightly raised at the front, while daywear was characterised by simple designs with high necklines and checked and plaid fabrics. Her designs had broad appeal, a fashion writer in The Times noting in 1948: "Angele Delanghe has built her collection on the three Balzac types – the unmarried girl, the woman of 30 and the woman of the world".

By 1949, Delanghe was designing for Fortnum & Mason. Although she had resigned her membership of IncSoc, taking her out of the so-called "big ten" of British fashion designers, her work was still considered important enough to regularly feature in newspaper reviews of the couture shows. That year, she presented a collection featuring lightweight woollen suits with soft sillhouettes, slim waists and pleated skirts. For the spring 1950 showed – designed for Fortnum & Mason – the reviewer noted her clever use of featherweight tweeds and worsteds, alongside cotton and linen and the fact that she had, as usual, designed with a focus on colour and suitability for the British climate.


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