Michael Fish (fashion designer)
Michael Fish was a British fashion designer famous for designing many of the notable British looks of the 1960s and 1970s, such as the kipper tie.
Career
As a fashion designer
Michael Fish was born in Wood Green, London in 1940. His mother Joan, worked in a chemist shop in Winchmore Hill, and his father, Sydney, was an on-course bookmaker. He had one sister, Lesley and a brother named Philip.Fish was apprenticed in shirtmaking, and by the early 1960s was designing shirts at traditional men's outfitters Turnbull & Asser of Jermyn Street. His designs reflected, and helped to inspire the peacock revolution in men's fashion design, which was a reaction against the conservatism of men's dress at the time. His shirts were floral in pattern and often included ruffles and other adornments.
In 1966, he opened the menswear shop, Mr. Fish, with his business partner Barry Sainsbury. The shop was located at 17, Clifford Street, Mayfair and specialized in flamboyant menswear, particularly bespoke shirts and ties.
Fish's boutique gained a reputation for offering flamboyant, attention-getting clothing. Notable celebrities of the 1960s and 1970s such as Peter Sellers, Lord Snowdon and David Bowie wore Fish's designs.
By the middle 1970s, Mr. Fish closed, and Fish took a job with Sulka in New York, a label famous for its silk foulard dressing gowns. In 1978, he returned to London to work for Jeremy Norman as greeter at the Embassy Club in Bond Street, which had a reputation at the time as the London equivalent of Studio 54.
Mr. Fish designs set fashion trends, the kipper tie being one unique example. He was also known for the polo neck sweater look, which debuted in New York and London in the winter of 1967. Perhaps the most controversial of Fish's designs was the "dress" designed to be worn by men, which was occasionally worn by such rock stars as David Bowie and Mick Jagger in the Hyde Park charity concert.
After he suffered a stroke in 2004, Fish's brand was purchased by David Mason.