Item 2020.100.7 - Burberry Vintage Check Cotton Face Mask

Identity area

Reference code

2020.100.7

Title

Burberry Vintage Check Cotton Face Mask

Date(s)

  • 2020 (Creation)

Level of description

Item

Extent and medium

2
One face mask and matching travel pouch.

Context area

Name of creator

(1856-Present)

Administrative history

Burberry’s 1856–1999 Burberry 1999–present
Burberry began as a men’s outfitter on Westminster Street in Basingstoke, Hampshire, that was opened in 1856 by 21-year-old Thomas Burberry (1835–1926). While initially focusing on clothing for the local farming community, Burberry’s manufactured garments to appeal to the growing number of upper-middle-class men taking up country pursuits, including hunting and fishing. In 1879 Burberry’s developed the fabric gabardine, patenting it in 1888. This hard-wearing cloth was woven initially from worsted wool, or worsted wool mixed with cotton, and waterproofed before weaving using lanolin (a waxy substance from sheep that helps them to shed water from their wool). In 1891 Burberry’s opened a flagship store at 30 Haymarket, London. Subsequently, international stores opened in New York, Buenos Aires, Paris and Montevideo between 1900 and 1914. The association of Burberry’s with the military was established in 1902 when a new service uniform for officers designed by the company was approved by the War Office. In 1906, they began accepting orders for uniforms from the British Army and Royal Marines, and the Royal Flying Corps (later Royal Air Force) used Burberry’s as a clothing supplier during the First World War.

Burberry’s became the preferred outfitter of numerous explorers, including Roald Amundsen, the first man to reach the South Pole in 1911, and Sir Ernest Shackleton, who led an Antarctic crossing expedition in 1914. In 1910, Claude Grahame-White, the first Englishman to fly between London and Manchester in under twenty-four hours, wore Burberry. Mountaineer George Mallory donned Burberry’s during his ill-fated effort in 1924 to be the first man to summit Mount Everest. The company patented the forerunner of the trench coat – called a Tielocken coat – in 1912, which became popular among British Army officers during the First World War. In 1913 Burberry’s relocated to a new building at 18–21 Haymarket designed by architect Walter Cave, which contained the company’s flagship store and headquarters. In 1955 Burberry’s, the family-run business, was bought by Great Universal Stores (GUS), a mail-order company based in Manchester. In 1970 Burberry’s entered a licensing agreement with Mitsui to manufacture licensed products for the Japanese market with Sanyo Shokai. It renewed the deal in 2000 for another twenty years. They generated over US$1.15 billion in retail sales in Japan in 2000, the most of any non-Japanese clothing brand. At one point, 75 per cent of the brand’s sales came from Japanese consumers.

In 1997 Rose Marie Bravo was appointed as new CEO for Burberry’s. She oversaw a reversal of fortune for the company, repositioning Burberry’s as a high-end designer fashion brand. In 1998 designer Roberto Menichetti (b. 1966) was appointed creative director, and in 1999 the company name was changed from Burberry’s to Burberry and saw the launch of its Prorsum line. Menichetti was replaced in 2001 by Christopher Bailey (b. 1971), who was appointed creative director, becoming Chief Creative Officer in 2009 and CEO in 2014. At the British Fashion Awards in 1999, Burberry won the Classic Design award, and in 2001 they won the Contemporary Designer award, demonstrating how the brand had begun to reposition itself. In 2007 and 2008, Christopher Bailey for Burberry was voted Menswear Designer of the Year at the British Fashion Awards, and again in 2013, when Burberry was also named Brand of the Year. They opened a new flagship store on London’s New Bond Street in 2000, bringing the brand’s global footprint to fifty-five locations in nine countries.

In July 2002 Burberry was listed on the London Stock Exchange following an initial public offering. In June 2003, the brand began showing their menswear collections during Milan Menswear Week and continued to do so until June 2013, when they relocated their menswear shows to London as part of London Collections: Men. GUS divested its stake in Burberry in 2005, distributing the remaining shares to its shareholders. Rose Marie Bravo retired in 2006 and was succeeded by Angela Ahrendts, who increased sales to more than £2 billion between 2006 and 2014. Burberry relocated its headquarters to Horseferry Road, Westminster, in 2007. They entered a deal in 2010 to acquire the stores and other assets operated by its franchisees in China, purchasing the assets and inventory of fifty stores. Burberry Prorsum, Burberry London and Burberry Brit were discontinued in 2016, and all products were rebranded as Burberry. The company announced in October 2017 that Christopher Bailey would depart the company in March 2018. Ricardo Tisci (b. 1974) was appointed Chief Creative Officer on 1 March 2018 and debuted his first collection in September 2018. In September 2022, Burberry announced that after five years as Chief Creative Officer, Riccardo Tisci would be replaced in October 2022 by Daniel Lee (b. 1986), the former creative director of Bottega Veneta.

Sources: Burberryplc.com; Financial Times; Guardian Unlimited; International Herald Tribune; Oxford Dictionary of National Biography; Retail Jeweller; The Daily Telegraph; The Sunday Times; The Times; WWD.

Archival history

Immediate source of acquisition or transfer

Content and structure area

Scope and content

Multi-coloured cotton face mask designed in Burberry archival Vintage check. The mask has a nose strip to adjust fit and black elastic loops on each side to go over the ears. It is double-layered, without a pocket for a filter, and it comes with a matching travel pouch made of the same material.

Appraisal, destruction and scheduling

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System of arrangement

Conditions of access and use area

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Conditions governing reproduction

Language of material

    Script of material

      Language and script notes

      Physical characteristics and technical requirements

      Paper care labels attached to one of the mask's ear loops.
      Made in Italy.
      Materials:
      Outer: 100% cotton
      Filling: 100% polyester
      Lining: 100% cotton
      Size M/L
      Measurements:
      Width including ear loops 12 1/2 inches / 32cm
      Height 6 inches / 15cm
      Item code: 8038083 1001

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      Note

      From website: We are proud to be donating all profits from the sale of these face masks to the Burberry Foundation COVID-19 Community Fund operated by The Burberry Foundation (registered charity number 1154468) to support communities impacted by the pandemic globally. The minimum donation per face mask purchased equates to 20 per cent of the selling price.
      Please note, this item is non-medical and is not a substitute for medical-grade personal protective equipment. It is not intended to replace other recommended measures to stop the spread of COVID-19.
      This is a reusable design made of excess fabric and enhanced with an antimicrobial technology – HeiQ Viroblock.

      Note

      The mask is packed in a 5x26x33 cm Burberry England branded luxury cardboard box tied with a beige ribbon. In the box there are paper tissues in which the travel pouch and the mask were wrapped and 3 branded paper envelopes with the shipping notes and payment details for the mask. The travel pouch contains a 100-page booklet with extensive information about the use of and care for the mask.

      Note

      Undercover exhibition label:

      VINTAGE CHECK COTTON FACE MASK
      Burberry
      28 October 2020
      £90
      Announced on 20 August 2020, this limited-edition face mask was not available until ten weeks later, on 28 October 2020, and sold out on the same day. It included a storage pouch and a 118-page booklet explaining how to use the mask. Burberry launched seven new masks in January 2021 in a variety of colours.
      Made in Italy
      Cotton, polyester
      Archive no. 2020.100.7

      Note

      Undercover exhibition label:

      INSTRUCTION BOOKLET
      Burberry
      October 2020
      Most of the face coverings in this exhibition were packaged with little or no information included about how to use them properly. However, the Burberry face mask came with a 118-page booklet, translated into several languages, with detailed instructions on how to use and care for the mask.
      Archive no. 2020.100.7

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