Before fashion learned to say inclusion, Ann Lowe was already dressing power.
From Park Avenue ballrooms to presidential ceremonies, her gowns quietly moved through American history—hand-stitched, flowered, and sculpted—often admired without her name ever being spoken.
For decades, Ann Lowe clothed the women who defined American society: Rockefellers, Du Ponts, Roosevelts. Yet her own legacy was deliberately pushed to the margins, reduced to whispers like “a colored dressmaker” in the press. Today, her work stands undeniable—no longer secret, no longer erased.
COUTURE BUILT BY HAND, NOT PERMISSION
Lowe’s design language was unmistakable: romantic silhouettes, architectural volume, and signature three-dimensional
floralappliqués—each petal shaped, layered, and sewn by hand.
Her gowns felt almost unreal, as if lifted from a fairytale but anchored by technical mastery.
This wasn’t ornament for ornament’s sake. It was discipline. Craft. Control.
She learned it early—long before New York, long before acclaim.
FROM ALABAMA TO MANHATTAN
Born in Clayton, Alabama, in 1898, Ann Lowe was the granddaughter of a formerly enslaved woman. Dressmaking was not a hobby in her family—it was a matter of survival, tradition, and inheritance. She learned the trade from her mother and grandmother, mastering construction as a child.
In 1917, she moved to New York and enrolled at the S.T. Taylor School of Design. Segregated from her white classmates, she was nevertheless so advanced that she completed the program in half the required time.
Talent could not be contained—even when it was intentionally isolated.
HISTORYJacqueline Bouvier’s Wedding Dress (1953)
Lowe’s most famous creation was the ivory silk taffeta gown worn by Jacqueline Kennedy at her wedding to John F. Kennedy. Just ten days before the ceremony, a flood destroyed the original dress and most of the bridesmaids’ gowns. Lowe and her team recreated everything from scratch—on time.
She absorbed the financial loss herself. The credit was muted. The dress became legendary.
Oscar Night, 1947
She designed the hand-painted floral gown worn by Olivia de Havilland when she won the Academy Award for Best Actress—cementing Lowe as a couturier trusted for moments that would live forever.
Madison Avenue, 1965
When Ann Lowe opened A.F. Chantilly, she became the first African American woman to own a fashion business in Manhattan’s Madison Avenue district. It was a radical act of presence in an industry built to exclude her.
Despite her elite clientele, Lowe was chronically underpaid. She charged far less than her white contemporaries for work that was often more complex. She was rarely credited. Her name was omitted while her gowns filled society pages.
Later in life, she battled glaucoma and bankruptcy. At one point, an anonymous benefactor—widely believed to be Jacqueline Kennedy—paid her back taxes, allowing her to remain in business. Even then, the system never bent in her favor.
— Enith Verona
Founder & Editor-in-Chief, ADORÉ
Designer Legacy Series.
Legacy doesn’t disappear when files are deleted.
It waits for the right house to rebuild it.
© Enith Verona. All rights reserved.
The Wall