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- Paco Energy
- Paco Rabanne
- Paco Rabanne Sport
- Paco Unisex (silver Bottle)
- Pal Zileri
- Pal Zileri
- Palladio
- Paloma Picasso
- Pancaldi
- Paola Ferri
- Paolo Conti
- Paradise
- Paradox
- Paradox Blue
- Paradox Green
- Parah
- Parera
- Parfum Beaute
- Parfum Blaze
- Parfum D'habit
- Parfum D'homme
- Parfum D'or
- Parfum Debutante
- Parfums Chevignon
- Parfums De Coeur
- Parfums De La Rue
- Parfums De Laroma
- Parfums De Larue
- Parfums Deray
- Parfums Gres
- Parfums Jacques Evard
- Parfums JJ. Coca
- Parfums JM
- Parfums Lively
- Parfums Paris Dakar
- Parfums Sensation
- Paris Hilton
- Paris Hilton Heir
- Paris Hotel
- Paris Perfumes
- Parisino
- Parisvally
- Parley Cosmetics
- Parlux
- Pasha De Cartier
- Pasha Eau Genereuse
- Passion
- Patchouli
- Patou Pour Homme
- Patrick Dempsey
- Patrick Dempsey 2
- Paul Sebastian
- Paul Sebastian Onyx
- Paul Smith
- Paul Smith Extreme
- Paul Smith London
- Paul Smith Story
- Pavarotti Donna
- Pelias
- Pelias Blu
- Pelias Pure
- Penhaligon's London
- Perfumers Workshop
- Perry Black
- Perry Ellis
- Perry Ellis (new)
- Perry Ellis 18
- Perry Ellis 18 Intense
- Perry Ellis 360
- Perry Ellis 360 Black
- Perry Ellis 360 Blue
- Perry Ellis 360 Red
- Perry Ellis 360 White
- Perry Ellis Aqua
- Perry Ellis M
- Perry Ellis Night
- Perry Ellis Platinum Label
- Perry Ellis Reserve
- Perry Ellis Spirited
- Perry Man
- Phat Farm
- Phat Farm Atman
- Phenomenon
- Pheromone
- Phileas
- Photo
- Physical Jockey
- Pi
- Pi Neo
- Pierre Balmain
- Pierre Cardin
- Pierre Cardin Revelation Energy
- Pierre Cardin Winter
- Pierre Laussey
- Pino Blue
- Pino Fifty
- Pino Silvestre
- Pino Silvestre Sport
- Pirates Of The Caribbean
- Pixar
- Playboy
- Playboy London
- Playlife
- Pleasures
- Pleasures Intense
- Pluto
- Pokemon
- Poker Player
- Polanti
- Police
- Police
- Police Colognes
- Police To Be Or Not To Be
- Police To Be The Illusionist
- Police Uomo
- Police Wings
- Polo
- Polo Black
- Polo Blue
- Polo Blue Sport
- Polo Crest
- Polo Double Black
- Polo Explorer
- Polo Modern Reserve
- Polo Red White & Blue
- Polo Sport
- Pontacio 21
- Porsche Design
- Portfolio
- Portfolio Black
- Portfolio Elite
- Portfolio Green
- Power
- Power John Kast
- Prada
- Prada Amber
- Prada Infusion D'iris
- Prada Infusion De Vetiver
- Prada Luna Rossa
- Preferred Stock
- Preferred Stock Light
- Premium
- Presence
- Presence Cool
- Pressure
- Prestige SAS
- Prince
- Prince Matchabelli
- Prince Noir
- Private Ikks
- Private Number
- Proteo
- Puig
- Puma
- Puma Aqua
- Puma Create
- Puma Green
- Puma I'm Going
- Puma Jam
History and background of Molyneux
Edward Molyneux was an Irishman of Huguenot ancestry. He never exaggerated, always maintained sight of the elegant heights to which couture could soar.
He was the designer to whom a fashionable woman would turn in the 20's and 30's when she wanted to be absolutely "right" and not predictable. He mixed with the aristocracy as well as café society of between-the-wars Paris and gained insight into the needs of women in that era of change and freedom. He had the surest of hands, dressed Gertude Lawrence for the stage and Princess Marina of Greece for her wedding to the Duke of Kent.
Molyneux was born in London in 1891 and his first ambition was to be a painter. His sketch for an evening dress won a contest sponsored by Lucile (Lady Duff Gordon) who hired him but this was interrupted by the war when he was wounded and lost an eye. In 1918 he opened his salon in Paris and from the beginning, his style was extreme simplicity and perfect taste. Success came quickly and he moved into a larger maison and opened several branches. In addition to couture, he designed furs, lingerie, hats and perfume notably his "Numero Cinq". He dressed the most elegant women right up to the outbreak of World War II and escaped from Paris to London in 1940.
Molyneux was known for conservative clothes but never staid or matronly. His typical customer was tall, thin and intelligent, with long slim legs and usually in the late twenties or thirties. His streamlined backless white satin evening dress with silver-fox furs thrown over the shoulder, became the symbol of 30's elegance. He was best known for his wonderful handling of navy blue and black, whether an easy plated skirt-suit or a slip-like evening dress.
In The 30's the pure Molyneux look fully emerged. His soft velvet evening coats fell to the floor in a single unbroken line, his dresses with matching three-quarter length coats had a graceful fluidity. By the end of the 30's he experimented with a newly narrowed waist, one that later Dior called the "New Look". In the 30's Irish designer John Cavanagh worked under Molyneux in Paris, and gained valuable experience which stood him in good stead when he later opened his own house.
After the war, Molyneux returned to Paris but it was not the same, his health particularly his eyesight, began to fail, so in 1950 he closed his Paris and London establishments and retired to Jamaica. He traveled widely and resumed his painting and in 1965 collaborated with his nephew with a ready-to-wear operation called "Studio Molyneux" He died in 1974 at the age of 83. He will be remembered for his streamlined 30's designs, clothing from a decade he helped to shape.
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