Mary Quant quotes:

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  • I divide my time between all the mud and open space in Surrey and the social life and work in London, particularly Chelsea, which still has the same village feel that it had in the swinging Sixties.

  • I absolutely adore cows. They're the most fascinating, gentle and beautiful animals. Their eyes are so amazing. I have ten that live on the land around my house. I love to talk to them. There are few things better than falling asleep in a field and being woken up by an inquisitive cow.

  • Risk it; go for it. Life always gives you another chance, another go at it. It's very important to take enormous risks.

  • I've always loved painting and drawing. I wish I'd developed it more and exhibited.

  • Let me give you an idea of Fifties Britain. The war had ended ten years before, and most people had returned to their gardens and allotments hoping life would revert to how it was before the hostilities.

  • Most of my memories of the Sixties are ones of optimism, high spirits and confidence.

  • Fashion is a tool... to compete in life outside the home. People like you better, without knowing why, because people always react well to a person they like the looks of.

  • My garden in England is full of eating-out places, for heat waves, warm September evenings, or lunch on a frosty Christmas morning.

  • I long for my garden to be complete. Working in it is one of my joys, but it will never be finished because it's forever changing with the seasons.

  • I still like the King's Road. It is very alive; it is a hustle of things from different countries and so on. It is lovely.

  • Good taste is death; vulgarity is life.

  • Snobbery has gone out of fashion, and in our shops you will find duchesses jostling with typists to buy the same dress.

  • Rules are invented for lazy people who don't want to think for themselves.

  • I saw no reason why childhood shouldn't last forever. So I created clothes that worked and moved and allowed people to run, to jump, to leap, to retain their precious freedom.

  • Risk it, go for it. Life always gives you another chance, another go at it. It's very important to take enormous risks.

  • The fashionable woman wears clothes. The clothes don't wear her.

  • I remember one day, when things were going frightfully well, I went to buy myself a really smashing car. I asked them to show me a Porsche with an automatic gearbox, and the salesman called over all the other salesmen, and they stood around absolutely roaring with laughter.

  • The whole 1960s thing was a ten-year running party, which was lovely. It started at the end of the 1950s and sort of faded a bit when it became muddled with flower power. It was marvelous.

  • As the daughter of two teachers with first-class degrees, I'd always seen myself as a duffer by comparison.

  • Only paper flowers are afraid of the rain.

  • The Lord's Prayer is the most perfect piece of poetry. I always feel at peace and moved when I recite it.

  • When I opened my first shop, city gents were still carrying tightly furled umbrellas and wearing bowler hats. It was into this world that I launched my new ideas about fashion.

  • Of course, I remember when everybody was thin. It wasn't until I went to America in the Sixties that I saw anyone who wasn't skinny thin.

  • In America, they never make anything without first having a market survey to ask the public what they want. People only ask for things they already know about, so you don't get anything new that way. That's why American fashion is stuck.

  • I have been on a diet since 1962.

  • I love restaurants, and I love cooking.

  • I have an awful lot of energy.

  • The real creators of miniskirt are the girls, the same that you seen in the streets.

  • One of the things I've learned is never to horde ideas, because either they are not so relevant or they've gone stale. Whatever it is, pour it out.

  • I used to start re-arranging my school uniform, hitching up my skirt to be more exciting-looking.

  • As a child, I used to spend nearly all my summer holidays with my aunt in Wales, and we used to catch mackerel in a boat and then cook them on board.

  • I didn't get fat even when I was pregnant. You have to work very hard at staying slim, and it's a bore. But it's worth it.

  • For one thing, I am still working as an adviser on fashion, design and colour and stuff.

  • Having money is rather like being a blond. It is more fun but not vital.

  • Coco Chanel hated me. I can understand why.

  • Jean Shrimpton was the most beautiful of all the models I have known. To walk down the King's Road, Chelsea, with Shrimpton was like walking through the rye. Strong men just keeled over right and left as she strode up the street.

  • In the old parts of Nice, the family tables are out in the cobbled streets so that you can't drive past. They insist you join them at midnight on a hot July evening. So that's just what you do, abandoning the car.

  • I dressed like Leslie Caron as a teenager: soft school pleats, Peter Pan collars.

  • Eating outdoors is a particular passion - that is, eating trestle-table a la nicoise.

  • As well as being a creative genius, Vidal Sassoon was a formative figure of the Sixties. Along with the Pill and the mini-skirt, his influence was truly liberating.

  • Only ugliness is obscene.

  • I liked masculine fabrics: Prince of Wales checks, city pinstripes, and flannels - worn with black tights, flattish shoes.

  • Fashion is not frivolous. It is a part of being alive today.

  • The fashionable woman is sexy, witty, and dry-cleaned.

  • I think to myself, 'You lucky woman - how did you have all this fun?'

  • I can't imagine not working, really. I just think work's more fun than fun.

  • A woman is as young as her knees.

  • All a designer can do is to anticipate a mood before people realize that they are bored. It is simply a matter of getting bored first

  • Being young is greatly overestimated ... Any failure seems so total. Later on you realize you can have another go.

  • Fashion is a tool... to compete in life outside the home

  • Fashion should be a game.

  • Fashion, as we knew it, is over; people wear now exactly what they feel like wearing.

  • Good taste is death. Vulgarity is life.

  • The gods gave man fire and he invented fire engines. They gave him love and he invented marriage.

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