Background
Tom Gilbey was born in London.
Tom Gilbey was born in London.
His designs have featured in the Fashion Museum, Bath, and are in the collections of the Victoria & Albert Museum and the Museum of London. He left school at the age of fifteen. Gilbey entered the fashion industry in the 1960s.
Speaking about new entrants to the Savile Row area then, Gilbey commented in The Independent, "You had Tommy Nutter, Rupert Lycett Green, Michael Fish and myself.
Tommy Nutter wasn"t a tailor and a cutter. He came from the sales side."
A 1968 suit of his is in the collection of the Victoria & Albert Museum, which writes of it, "Worn with a silk rollneck shirt, this suit exemplifies the informal dress codes of the later 1960s.
The revolutionary idea of replacing the shirt and tie reached even to Savile Row establishments. Gilbey uses a traditional tweed for a futuristic design, incorporating zipped front and pocket fastenings.".
A 1969 suit in the Museum of London comes from Gilbey"s shop in Sackville Street, where it required four fittings.
lieutenant was made to be worn on a Queen Elizabeth II sailing from New York to Southampton on 8 October 1969, for dinner at the captain"s table - "The wearer later regretted his choice, which looked totally out of place at a formal occasion where dinner jackets were the norm."
In the early 1970s, the snooker player Alex Higgins wore a Gilbey outfit whilst playing a match in a packed hall in Bombay. In high temperatures without air conditioning, Higgins found it unsuitable, and "sweated off another eight ounces in weight" with every ball he hit. In 1995 one of his bridegroom"s outfits was chosen, along with a Catherine Rayner wedding gown, to represent the Dress of the Year for 1995 in the Fashion Museum, Bath.
He is particularly known for designing waistcoats.