Arch-headed display windows of a heritage listed shop front from 1847 at Sværtegade 3 in Copenhagen, Denmark
A display window, also a shop window (British English) or store window (American English), is a window in a shop displaying items for sale or otherwise designed to attract customers to the store.[1] Usually, the term refers to larger windows in the front façade of the shop.[2]
History
The first display windows in shops were installed in the late 18th century in London, where levels of conspicuous consumption were growing rapidly. Retailer Francis Place was one of the first to experiment with this new retailing method at his tailoring establishment in Charing Cross, where he fitted the shop-front with large plate glass windows. Although this was condemned by many, he defended his practice in his memoirs, claiming that he "sold from the window more goods...than paid journeymen's wages and the expenses of housekeeping.[3] Display windows at boutiques usually have dressed-up mannequins in them.
Window dressing
Displaying merchandise in a store window is known as window dressing, which is also used to describe the items displayed themselves. A retail worker that arranges displays of goods is known as a window dresser.
As a figure of speech, window dressing means something done to make a better impression, and sometimes implies something dishonest or deceptive.[4]
Window dressers
Window dresser
Window dressers are retail workers who arrange displays of goods in shop windows or within a shop itself. They may work for design companies contracted to work for clients or for department stores, independent retailers, airport or hotel shops.
Alone or in consultation with product manufacturers or shop managers they artistically design and arrange the displays and may put clothes on mannequins—or use the services of a mannequin dresser[5]—and display the prices on the products.
They may hire joiners and lighting engineers to augment their displays. When new displays are required they have to dismantle the existing ones, and they may have to maintain displays during their lifetimes. Some window dressers hold formal display design qualifications.[not verified in body]
Notable window dressers
Giorgio Armani, the fashion designer, once worked as a window dresser.[6]
Henry Clarke, a Vogue photographer, first worked in the 1940s as a window dresser for I. Magnin, luxury department store in San Francisco before becoming a background and accessorising assistant at the Vogue New York studio, where he learned to photograph by observing the different styles of Cecil Beaton, Irving Penn and Horst P. Horst.[9]
Salvador Dalí, the surrealist artist, was commissioned by Bonwitt Teller in 1939 to do a store window installation, which made headlines.[10][7]
Victor Hugo, a Venezuelan born artist, and one-time assistant to Andy Warhol, produced window dressings for Halston in the 1970s, becoming the first to transform windows and mannequins into Pop Art.[15]
Don Imus, American radio personality once worked as a department store window dresser.[16]
Ellen Jose, an Australian indigenous artist and photographer.[17]
Alice Lex-Nerlinger, after graduation from art school, worked as a shop window decorator in the department store Tempelhof from 1916–18, an experience which brought her closer to sisters in the labour movement, the subjects of her early photography and montage.[18]
Molina, a fictional character, one of the principals of Manuel Puig's novel Kiss of the Spider Woman, was a window dresser prior to his incarceration.[24]
E. C. Segar left his job as a projectionist and worked at decorating jobs including paper hanging, painting and window dressing, before deciding on a career as a cartoonist.[29]
Henry Talbot worked as a department store window-dresser in London in the 1930s before being shipped to Australia on the Dunera, where he became a fashion photographer and partner in business of Helmut Newton
Hans Hermann Weyer, a German seller of fraudulent nobility and academics titles and flamboyant member of the international jet set who became an honorary consul of Bolivia in Luxembourg, was in youth an apprentice window dresser.[30]
^The new encyclopedia of Southern culture. Volume 21, Art & architecture. Bonner, Judith H.,, Pennington, Estill Curtis,, University of Mississippi. Center for the Study of Southern Culture. Chapel Hill. 14 January 2013. ISBN978-0-8078-6994-9. OCLC825970770.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link)
^Kennedy, Alicia; Stoehrer, Emily Banis, (author.); Calderin, Jay, (author.) (2013), Fashion design, referenced : a visual guide to the history, language, & practice of fashion, Rockport Publishers, ISBN978-1-59253-677-1{{citation}}: |author2= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)