Sally Josephs was born in Scranton, Pennsylvania.[1] She took an interest in design at age eight, when her family moved to New York where her aunt had a millinery shop. As she reflected in a 1949 interview,
Like most kids, I liked to copy the grown-ups, so it seemed perfectly natural for me to start fashioning scraps of felt and ribbon into hats for my dolls. When I got a little older, my aunt taught me to help her retrim and shape hats for her customers and on the side, I started dreaming up hats for myself and my friends, too.[4]
Career
At 18 she began working in the millinery department of Macy's. Within a year she had become assistant millinery buyer, and three years later she was hired as chief millinery buyer at Bamberger's department store in Newark.[1][5] After marrying millinery wholesaler Sergiu F. Victor in 1927, she gave birth to a son, Richard, and briefly retired. However she soon returned to work and became the head designer of Victor's firm, Serge.[1][4]
In 1934 she established a fashion label under her own name, with a millinery salon on East 53rd Street in New York. Her hats began to be sold in high-profile stores, including Lord & Taylor on Fifth Avenue.[4][5]Fortune compared her work with that of Lilly Daché and Mr. John.[1]
Victor was regarded as an innovator, and her hats remained popular through her retirement in 1967.[1] Along with Lilly Daché and Mr. John, she is seen as one of the most prominent milliners of the period.[5][6]
Some of her popular product lines included "baby bonnets", "Pompadour hats",[8] "Grecian pillboxes",[1] "honey hives", and "Tudor tops".[9] Designs intended for the mass market were sold through a subsidiary named Sally V.[6]
Victor designed several hats for First Lady Mamie Eisenhower, including one known as the "Airwave" which she wore at her husband Dwight's inauguration in 1953.[6][10] Former First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt also wore Sally Victor hats in the 1950s.[11] Victor later created designs for Jacqueline Kennedy.[2]
Throughout her career, Sally Victor emphasized making hats which were attractive, rather than being chic or avant-garde.
Good fashion is an individual matter. It is whatever makes you look better. I do not believe in any style that does not make the wearer prettier.[6]
^ abcBlanco F., Jose; Doering, Mary D.; Hunt-Hurst, Patricia; Vaughan Lee, Heather (November 23, 2015). "Victor, Sally (1905–1977)". Clothing and Fashion: American Fashion from Head to Toe. ABC-CLIO. p. 316. ISBN9781610693103. Retrieved September 19, 2016 – via Google Books.
^Roosevelt, Eleanor (March 20, 1956). "My Day". United Feature Syndicate. Retrieved September 20, 2016 – via George Washington University.
^Blanco F., Jose; Doering, Mary D.; Hunt-Hurst, Patricia; Vaughan Lee, Heather (November 23, 2015). "Victor, Sally (1905–1977)". Clothing and Fashion: American Fashion from Head to Toe. ABC-CLIO. p. xxiii. ISBN9781610693103. Retrieved September 19, 2016 – via Google Books.