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Written by EmmaPeelPants
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RADLEY
Radley was a British clothing manufacturing company of the 1960s through the 1980s, owned by Alfred Radley. The company is best known for its association with the Quorum Boutique, which it acquired controlling interest of in 1969.
The designers at Quorum, Ossie Clark and Alice Pollock, also did garments under the Radley label, and many Radley garments borrowed design elements from the popular Quorum designers. The garment would be sketched by Clark, then Radley's in-house designer would use the ideas to produce a variety of designs for Radley.
Rose Bradford was the designer employed by the Radley firm in the late Sixties to adapt the original designs of Ossie Clark into affordable licensed pieces under the Radley label (once they had come to the financial rescue of Alice Pollock and Ossie's boutique, Quorum). Bradford seems to have been an extremely talented designer in her own right, designing under her own name for both the Radley and Quorum labels in the Seventies, but was always overshadowed by the many other designers Radley employed over the years. She is also rumoured to have wholly designed some pieces which were sold as Ossie Clark garments, as an experiment to see if this could work without Clark's involvement.
See also: Quorum
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from a late 1960s/early 1970s pink tie back dress
Courtesy of emmapeelpants

from an early 1970s floral chiffon mini dress
Courtesy of emmapeelpants

from a mid-late 1970s moss crepe wrap dress
Courtesy of emmapeelpants

from a 1970s dress
Courtesy of emmapeelpants
from a mid 1970s dress
Courtesy of emmapeelpants

from a late 1970s print dress
Courtesy of emmapeelpants

from a 1980s/90s dress
Courtesy of artizania
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