Linda
Allard for Ellen Tracy: Fashioning A Career features designs
Linda Allard created during her 40 year career with the Ellen
Tracy firm in New York City. Knowing from childhood that she
wanted to be a fashion designer, the Doylestown, Ohio, native
graduated from Kent State's School of Art and headed for New
York with a bus ticket, $200 and a portfolio from her senior
show -- the first fashion show held at Kent State. After pounding
the pavement for two weeks looking for a job, she received a
call from a manager at Ellen Tracy. On the rainy New York afternoon
of September 27, 1962, she interviewed with the company's owner,
Herbert Gallen, who hired her for "a new position . . .
giving me a chance to prove myself . My salary is not definite
. . . probably $50 or $60 a week . . . ," as she wrote
in a letter home. She started working the moment she was hired
spending the rest of that afternoon cutting out two dresses
and folding sample fabrics. It was her first and only job. The
company, the job and the designer grew in sophistication as
the American sportswear industry grew to meet the needs of women
entering the workforce. Linda Allard, encouraged by Herbert
Gallen, took innovative risks to bring the firm from a "blouse
house" to "Junior Sportswear" to "Contemporary"
to what has become known as "Bridge," the high quality
ready-to-wear priced just under luxury designer labels for which
the firm is known today. Along the way, with the combination
of Gallen's shrewd business and fashion sense coupled to Allard's
creative talent and sensitivity to the customer's needs, the
firm made money every year and Linda Allard became one of the
highest paid designers in the industry. Linda Allard designed
clothes known for the quality of the fabrics, attention to detail,
harmonious use of color and classic line. Women could mix and
match Allard's separates across the years making each piece
in a wardrobe a worthwhile investment. When Herbert Gallen sold
the firm to Liz Claibourne in 2003, Linda Allard arranged for
the new ownership to donate the Ellen Tracy archives to the
Kent State University Museum, and she personally selected the
garments that she wished to represent her career. The exhibition
has been selected from this generous gift.
Jean Druesedow
Museum Director and Curator of the Exhibition
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