Scottish Daily Mail

This two-piece was perfect with my Vidal Sassoon bob

AngelA BAiley, 72, lives with her husband in Bath. She donated a purple two-piece outfit that was designed in 1962.

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This outfit was around ten years old when i acquired it in the early seventies through a swap with another mother at my daughter’s primary school in Bloomsbury, London.

We were quite a sociable group of mums and, as i recall, she liked a coat i owned, so we made the exchange.

i already had a couple of Mary Quant pieces. My first was a long, black, column dress with a polo-neck, which i wore with papier mâché earrings; huge gold balls that were about 3in in diameter. i had bought that one with my pocket money in a sale at the department store in suffolk, where i grew up, and got a pale blue evening dress while a student at Goldsmiths College in London.

But this one was everything to me. it came in two pieces: a tight-waisted, pleated purple skirt and then a matching, long-sleeved top that’s inverted at the front, with a collar and a bow to tie. When i put it on, it swung just so. i had a tiny waist then — i don’t any more.

it wasn’t an evening outfit — in those days, evening dos required something long or glamorous — but it was the sort of thing you went out for lunch in or to a friend’s party during the day. When i first left school i worked as a junior sales assistant at Fortnum & Mason, earning £6 a week. We sold Pucci and Christian Dior; Mary Quant’s designs were so different. i was tall (5ft10in), with size seven feet and an unruly mass of dark hair — the exact opposite of the blonde, curvy Doris Day look everyone wanted. Mary Quant’s designs really spoke to me, as did the Vidal sassoon haircut that she sported, which i copied. You could go anywhere, do anything, and feel relaxed. i last wore the outfit during the Eighties, before my younger daughter was born. since then, it’s been packed away in my wardrobe, carefully wrapped in tissue.

i must have raided it for buttons at one point — there’s one missing on each cuff — but i simply couldn’t bear to throw it away.

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