Enid Gilchrist

Enid Beatrice Gilchrist OAM (died 17 October 2007)[1] was an Australian fashion designer, who became well known for her numerous self-drafting sewing pattern books which were very popular in the 1950s to 1970s.

Enid studied dress design at Melbourne Technical College (now Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology) and during World War II worked as a dressmaker for a pattern firm. She worked with the Victorian Infant Welfare Department and the Kindergarten Union to produce a series of patterns for babies and young children. She later taught dress design at Footscray Technical College and the Emily Mcpherson College.

Enid began to make patterns using a pattern-drafting method and later joined New Idea magazine, where she published articles and patterns and produced sewing books showing clothes which people could make up from the pattern drafts.

While her books were published without dates, they can be grouped by reference to the decimalization of Australian currency in 1966, demonstrated by the price on the cover.

Earliest Publications


Publications before 1966


Publications Circa 1966


Publications Post 1966

Sources

References

  1. "Funeral Notice". Retrieved 2008-03-23. Text of Funeral Notice from Sunshine Coast: 23 October 2007

External links

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