Rebecca C. Tuite

Rebecca C. Tuite is a British author, based in Los Angeles.[1][2][3] She specializes in writing about fashion, costume and film history.[4]

Rebecca C. Tuite
Born
Surrey, England
Other namesRebecca Tuite
OccupationWriter, Fashion Historian.
Known forWritings on fashion and fashion history

Educational career

Tuite was born in Surrey, England.[5] She has a Bachelor's degree, in English, from the University of Exeter. While working on this degree she was an exchange student at Vassar College. She has a Master's degree in Fashion Journalism, from the London College of Fashion. She is currently working on a PhD from the Bard Graduate Center in New York City.[1]

Publications

Tuite's first book, published in 2014, was Seven Sisters Style: The All-American Preppy Look, which focused on the influence that students at the "Seven Sisters" (a group of prestigious all-female American colleges) had on fashion.[5] Tuite explored the fashion trends initiated by Seven Sisters students during the first half of the twentieth century, and traced their subsequent popularity across the boundaries of fashion and film, particularly describing their influence on styles from American heritage brands including Ralph Lauren and Tommy Hilfiger.[6] It was the first book exclusively dedicated to the female side of preppy style pioneered by American college girls.[7] The book was featured in The Wall Street Journal,[8] Vanity Fair,[9] New York Magazine,[10] Paris Vogue,[11] and described by Refinery29 as "a beautifully illustrated, intensively researched celebration of the all-American preppy style pioneered by the women of the Seven Sisters Colleges — consider it a Take Ivy for the distaff set."[12]

Her second book, published in 2019, was 1950s in Vogue: The Jessica Daves Years, 1952-1962.[5][13] The book was the very first volume ever published that was solely dedicated to editor-in-chief, Jessica Daves, and her time at the helm of American Vogue. 1950s in Vogue appeared in The Los Angeles Times,[14] Vogue,[15] Vogue Paris,[16] The New York Journal of Books,[17] The New York Post[18] and others. In their feature on the book, Vogue magazine noted, "Having poured over the 220 issues of the magazine edited by Daves, Tuite has organized her own book into eight sections focused on subjects from cocktail dressing to culture that demonstrate the breadth of Daves’s catholic interests."[15] In their review, the New York Journal of Books observed, "Rarely, if ever, has this reader come across a book of this genre that was as thoroughly annotated, enlightening, informative and just incredible on so many different levels." [17]

  • Rebecca C. Tuite (2017). Seven Sisters Style: The All-American Preppy Look. Rizzoli International Publications. ISBN 9780789332950.
  • Rebecca Tuite (2019). 1950s in Vogue: The Jessica Daves Years, 1952-1962. Thames & Hudson. ISBN 9780500294376.

See also

References

  1. "Rebecca C. Tuite Biography". Rebecca C. Tuite.
  2. "Q&A with Rebecca C. Tuite, author of Seven Sisters Style". The Hambledon. Retrieved 2020-02-21. As a fashion historian (and, at the time, a fashion journalist), it did not take me long to realize that so many aspects of fashion today are clearly derived from various on-campus trends – especially this American preppy style that never goes out of fashion and has enjoyed a real runway renaissance in recent years.
  3. Rebecca C. Tuite. "1950s in Vogue: The Jessica Daves Years, 1952-1962". 92y. Retrieved 2020-02-21.
  4. "Lecture and book signing". Bata Shoe Museum. February 2020. Retrieved 2020-02-21. Join us as we welcome author Rebecca Tuite, for a discussion on “The Dramatic Shoe: Fashionable Footwear in American Vogue, 1952-1962”. Following the talk, Rebecca will sign copies of her new book 1950s Vogue: The Jessica Daves Years, 1952-1962.
  5. "Fashion historian & author: Rebecca C. Tuite". Retrieved 2020-02-21. Rebecca graduated from the University of Exeter (UK) with a First Class Honours degree in English, completing part of her undergraduate studies at Vassar College in New York. She also holds a Masters Degree in Fashion Journalism (Distinction Honours) from the University of the Arts – London College of Fashion.
  6. Priya Rao (March 2014). "Photos: How to Capture American Preppy: Seven Sisters Style". Vanity Fair magazine. Retrieved 2018-12-10. That unique sensibility is the premise of Rebecca C. Tuite’s new book, Seven Sisters Style, out on April 8. 'These women handled themselves with a newfound American grace,' says Tuite, a University of Exeter and London transplant, who spent time at Vassar College in 2006.
  7. Tuite, Rebecca (April 8, 2014). "Seven Sisters Style: The All-American Preppy Look". Amazon.
  8. Brazilian, Alexa (May 9, 2014). "Charm Bracelets à la Seven Sisters". The Wall Street Journal.
  9. Rao, Priya (March 24, 2014). "How to Capture American Preppy Seven Sisters Style". Vanity Fair.
  10. Schwiegershausen, Erica (April 16, 2014). "Look Back at Preppy Collegiate Styles of Yore". The Cut.
  11. Krehl, Margaux (April 7, 2014). "10 Books for Your Coffee Table". Vogue Paris.
  12. Duggan, Leeann (April 23, 2014). "Meet The Ladies Who Changed American Style". Refinery29.
  13. Laird Borrelli-Persson (2019-12-16). "A New Book, 1950s in Vogue, Celebrates Jessica Daves, the Magazine's Editor from 1952-1962". Vogue magazine. Retrieved 2020-02-20. Having poured over the 220 issues of the magazine edited by Daves, Tuite has organized her own book into eight sections focused on subjects from cocktail dressing to culture that demonstrate the breadth of Daves’s catholic interests.
  14. Drew Tewksbury (November 8, 2019). "What to Buy the Avid Reader". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2020-04-15.
  15. Laird Borrelli-Persson (December 16, 2019). "A New Book, 1950s in Vogue, Celebrates Jessica Daves, the Magazine's Editor from 1952-1962". Vogue magazine.
  16. "Le Mythe: Vogue". Vogue Paris: 128. December 2019-January 2020. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  17. Jeffrey Felner (December 10, 2019). "Book Review: 1950s in Vogue: The Jessica Daves Years, 1952–1962". New York Journal of Books.
  18. Mackenzie Dawson (December 14, 2019). "Best Books of the Week". New York Post.
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