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#Closet #Marjorie #Merriweather #Post

Marjorie Merriweather Post was one of America’s wealthiest and most powerful women and one of the most famous heiresses, socialites and philanthropists. She was also quite the clothes horse, who set trends and became a fashion icon, amassing a magnificent wardrobe collected over 70 years.

Post’s lifelong passion for objects that were exceptionally beautiful and impeccably constructed extended to her taste for clothing and her love of fashion is reflected in her unique style. Post not only filled her former residence, Hillwood Estate in Washington, DC, now a museum, with her vast collection of 18th-century French furniture and decorations and one of the largest collections of Czarist Russian art outside the Soviet Union, including Fabergé eggs, she also kept her clothing and accessories there. Her fashion archive includes virtually everything she had acquired and worn since she was 16 years old, complete with notes on the objects: more than 175 luxurious, embroidered evening gowns and dresses and spectacular costumes, and hundreds of accessories including shoes, gloves, handbags, fans and parasols, hats and other items that demonstrate how she loved things that were well made. She also had many fantastic jewels and was a major client of Cartier.

Post’s Sweet 16 evening dress, 1903, of white spotted tulle, ivory silk taffeta and cream silk velvet, embellished with coral beads and clear rhinestones.

Post was born in 1887 into a Midwestern middle-class family that became one of America’s wealthiest. She was the only child of C.W. Post, founder of what would later become General Foods. At 27, she inherited the Postum Cereal empire after her father’s suicide in 1914, making her the wealthiest woman in the country at the time.

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