Skip to main content

Callot Soeurs

Close
Refine Results
Artist / Maker / Culture
Collections
Date
to
Department
Country
Artist Info
Callot SoeursFrench, 1895 - 1937

Marie Gerber, Marthe Bertrand, Régine Tennyson-Chantrelle, and Joséphine Crimont—the Callot sisters—opened their couture house in 1895. Callot Soeurs rose to prominence during the early twentieth-century, achieving a reputation for quality craftsmanship, intricate embellishments, and exceptional materials. As Diana Vreeland wrote in Inventive Paris Clothes, 1909-1939, “Callot dresses were perfect in every detail.” The Callot sisters had the distinction of being mentioned by Marcel Proust, who offered a minor criticism: “They go in rather too freely for lace.” If they were particularly renowned for their use of lace, it may have been because lace-making was a family legacy.

Their work of the 1920s—still beautifully decorated—often showed an exotic, Eastern influence. The House of Callot Soeurs was also the training ground for one of the twentieth-century’s greatest designers—Madeleine Vionnet—who was Callot’s head of the workroom, or première. She considered her experience at Callot to be invaluable later in her career, and expressed great respect for the house’s head designer, Madame Gerber. She once described her as “a true dressmaker,” and “a great lady totally occupied with a profession that consists of adorning women . . . not constructing a costume.”

Read MoreRead Less
Sort:
Filters
4 results
Black lace long sleeve floor-length dress with high off-white lace collar, velvet and beaded tr…
Evening dress
Callot Soeurs
c. 1909
Cream above the ankle length afternoon dress with long sleeves, insets of lace at shoulders, sl…
Dress
Callot Soeurs
Summer 1917
Orange cap sleeve evening dress with woven gold lamé texture, draping in center front secured w…
Evening dress
Callot Soeurs
c. 1919
Black evening dress horizontal gold lamé bands with linear floral and Chinese motifs
Evening dress
Callot Soeurs
c.1924