From Irene Caste archives

Irene Castle pictured here with one of her pups in a 1915 photo by Underwood & Underwood | Cornell fashion coll. on IG

Ballroom dancer. Silent film star. Fashion designer. Animal rights advocate. Irene Castle wore many hats – and donned countless dazzling costumes – as a celebrity during the early twentieth century.

Irene Castle as Patria Channing in the serial Patria (1917). Only episodes 1 to 4, & 10 survive at the MoMA

Irene Castle was known for playing strong and stylish female leads such as the title character in the serial “Patria,” a swashbuckling, gun-toting munitions factory heiress who helps thwart a foreign invasion. Off-screen, Castle was also a pioneering entrepreneur who designed many of her own costumes and skillfully cultivated her image to become a household brand […]

“She was a very astute businesswoman,” Green said. “She knew the value of her name as a brand and so she branded all of her fashion innovations.” In 1917, Castle collaborated with Corticelli Silk Mills to develop “Patria”-themed fabrics, and started her own clothing line, Irene Castle Corticelli Fashions, in 1923. She also applied her moniker to everything from her “Castle Bob” haircut in 1913 that sparked a trend in the ’20s to the “Castle Band” of jewelry around her forehead that later resurfaced in hippie fashions of the ’60s, according to Green. / quoted from Cornell news

Silent film actress, dancer, and fashion icon Irene Castle, from the Irene Castle Photographs and Papers Coll. | src Cornell news

Irene Castle other fashion photos

Ira L. Hill :: Irene Castle (1893 - 1969), 1910s. Other fashion photos. | src Cornell Library
Ira L. Hill :: Irene Foote Castle (1893 – 1969), ca. 1920. Gelatin silver print. National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution
Ira L. Hill :: Irene Castle (1893 - 1969), 1910s. Other fashion photos. | src Cornell Library
Ira L. Hill :: Irene Castle (1893 – 1969), 1910s. Other fashion photos. | src Cornell Library
Ira L. Hill :: Irene Castle (1893 - 1969), 1910s. Other fashion photos. | src Cornell Library
Ira L. Hill :: Irene Castle (1893 – 1969), 1910s. Other fashion photos. | src Cornell Library
Ira L. Hill :: Irene Castle (1893 - 1969), 1910s. Other fashion photos. | src Cornell Library
Irene Castle in a rhinestone-encrusted headdress known as the Castle Band / Cornell Library
Ira L. Hill :: Irene Castle (1893 - 1969), 1910s. Other fashion photos. | src Cornell Library
Irene Castle in a rhinestone-encrusted headdress known as the Castle Band / Cornell Library
Ira L. Hill :: Irene Castle (1893 - 1969), 1910s. Other fashion photos. | src Cornell Library
Ira L. Hill :: Irene Castle (1893 – 1969), 1910s. Other fashion photos. | src Cornell Library
Ira L. Hill :: Irene Castle (1893 - 1969), 1910s. Other fashion photos. | src Cornell Library
Ira L. Hill :: Irene Castle (1893 – 1969), 1910s. Other fashion photos. | src Cornell Library
Ira L. Hill :: Irene Castle (1893 - 1969), 1910s. Other fashion photos. | src Cornell Library
Ira L. Hill :: Irene Castle (1893 – 1969), 1910s. Other fashion photos. | Cornell Library
Ira L. Hill :: Irene Castle (1893 - 1969), 1910s. Other fashion photos. | src Cornell Library
Ira L. Hill :: Irene Castle (1893 – 1969), 1910s. Other fashion photos. | Cornell Library
Ira L. Hill :: Irene Castle (1893 - 1969), 1910s. Other fashion photos. | src Cornell Library
Ira L. Hill :: Irene Castle (1893 – 1969), 1910s. Other fashion photos. | Cornell Library
Ira L. Hill :: Irene Castle (1893 - 1969), 1910s. Other fashion photos. | src Cornell Library
Ira L. Hill :: Irene Castle (1893 – 1969), 1910s. Other fashion photos. | src Cornell Library

Castle by de Meyer · 1919

Adolf de Meyer :: Irene Foote Castle, 1919. Photogravure. | src National Portrait Gallery [Detail]
Adolf de Meyer :: Irene Foote Castle, 1919. Photogravure. | src National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Irene Castle Corticelli Fashions

Ira Lawrence Hill :: Irene Castle Corticelli Fashions, 1910s | src Cornell University Library

Irene Castle Corticelli Fashions

When Irene Castle formalized her relationship with Corticelli Silk Mills in 1917, she was at the height of her fame: she had recently filmed the serial Patria (1917) and celebrated the success of The Whirl of Life (1915); her co-authored best selling book, Modern Dancing (1914); and the Broadway hit Watch Your Step (1914). Irene was an arbiter of fashion, outfitted almost exclusively by Lady Duff Gordon and was voted the first “Best Dressed Woman in America.”

As early as 1914, silk companies like Mallison and Corticelli began using film actresses to promote their products; however, Castle was the first film star to create a line of clothing. The line launched in tandem with the serial, Patria, and Satin Patria was the fabric promoted in the early dress designs. Initially Lady Duff Gordon was the ghost designer, but as the fashion line developed Irene took over the creative side and Corticelli advertisements emphasized her role as designer. In reality, Irene remembered in her memoirs, “I had an endorsement contract with the Corticelli Silk Company which required very little of me. I helped them design the clothes.” In the later advertisements, Corticelli claimed that the dresses were duplicates from Irene’s wardrobe. “The same delightful effect of quality which distinguishes the wraps and frocks of ‘America’s Best Dressed Woman’ is found in every ‘Irene Castle Exclusive Model,’ read a 1923 advertisement. Fall/Winter 1927 was the last season of Irene Castle Corticelli Fashions and the Corticelli Silk Mill would close soon after the start of the Great Depression. [quoted from Cornell University Library]

Ira Lawrence Hill :: Irene Castle Corticelli Fashions, 1910s | src Cornell University Library
Ira Lawrence Hill :: Irene Castle Corticelli Fashions, 1910s | src Cornell University Library
Ira Lawrence Hill :: Irene Castle Corticelli Fashions, 1910s | src Cornell University Library
Ira Lawrence Hill :: Irene Castle Corticelli Fashions, 1910s | src Cornell University Library
Ira Lawrence Hill :: Irene Castle. Corticelli Fashion photos, 1910s | src Cornell University Library

Irene Castle with headband

Ira L. Hill :: Irene Castle (Irene Foote) wearing a headband, 1910s | src Cornell University
Ira L. Hill :: Irene Castle (Irene Foote) wearing a headband, 1910s | src Cornell University
Irene Castle in a rhinestone-encrusted headdress known as the Castle Band / Cornell Library
Irene Castle in a rhinestone-encrusted headdress known as the Castle Band / Cornell Library
Headdress worn by Irene Castle. Silver lame with malleable wire and rhinestones, ca. 1917. | src Cornell Library
Headdress worn by Irene Castle. Silver lame with malleable wire and rhinestones, ca. 1917. | src Cornell Library
Irene Castle in a rhinestone-encrusted headdress known as the Castle Band / Cornell Library
Irene Castle in a rhinestone-encrusted headdress known as the Castle Band / Cornell Library

by Edward Thayer Monroe

Edward Thayer Monroe :: Irene Castle (?), a sensational dancer in the flapper era. | src behold.com
Edward Thayer Monroe :: Flapper era dancer and fashion icon Irene Castle (?). | src behold.com

Note: on source, this is allegedly a portrait or fashion shot of Irene Caste (b. Irene Foote); in other sources, this image is credited as Irene Vernon’s. We will welcome further information on this image or on this sitter. Thank you!