Adel Rootstein (1930 – 20 September 1992) was a British mannequin designer responsible for premium designs that are sold worldwide.
Rootstein was born in Warmbaths, South Africa in 1930. She married the industrial designer Richard Hopkins. [1] Rootstein started by making window displays, which gave her an understanding of "the void that had existed between fashion coverage in the international media & what actually happened in windows." [2][ full citation needed][ non-primary source needed]
Rootstein started making mannequins in the kitchen of her basement flat in Earls Court in 1956. [2] She first hired sculptor John Taylor and model Imogen for her first mannequin, placed in a reclining position. [2] This was the start of her first collection, called "GoGo". [2][ non-primary source needed] Her sources of inspiration expanded to music and clubs. [3] Rootstein has been called the "Rolls-Royce" of mannequin makers, and later used well-known singers and actresses as models for her mannequins; Cher, Joan Collins and Twiggy among them. [4]
In 1990, Rootstein and her husband Rick Hopkins set up the Rootstein Hopkins Foundation to assist young artists and designers. [5] The mannequin business was sold in 1991 to Japanese mannequin manufacturer, Yoshichu who had been a long time collaborator of Adel's [6].They continued to grow the business and release collections that stayed true to Adel's founding principles. Rootstein died in London on 20 September 1992.
'If Talaric is the Henry Ford [of mannequin makers], Rootstein is the Rolls-Royce,' Townsend says. 'Her older mannequins are collector's items … she's the one who started designing mannequins after celebrity models. Like Joan Collins, Cher and Twiggy.'
Adel Rootstein (1930 – 20 September 1992) was a British mannequin designer responsible for premium designs that are sold worldwide.
Rootstein was born in Warmbaths, South Africa in 1930. She married the industrial designer Richard Hopkins. [1] Rootstein started by making window displays, which gave her an understanding of "the void that had existed between fashion coverage in the international media & what actually happened in windows." [2][ full citation needed][ non-primary source needed]
Rootstein started making mannequins in the kitchen of her basement flat in Earls Court in 1956. [2] She first hired sculptor John Taylor and model Imogen for her first mannequin, placed in a reclining position. [2] This was the start of her first collection, called "GoGo". [2][ non-primary source needed] Her sources of inspiration expanded to music and clubs. [3] Rootstein has been called the "Rolls-Royce" of mannequin makers, and later used well-known singers and actresses as models for her mannequins; Cher, Joan Collins and Twiggy among them. [4]
In 1990, Rootstein and her husband Rick Hopkins set up the Rootstein Hopkins Foundation to assist young artists and designers. [5] The mannequin business was sold in 1991 to Japanese mannequin manufacturer, Yoshichu who had been a long time collaborator of Adel's [6].They continued to grow the business and release collections that stayed true to Adel's founding principles. Rootstein died in London on 20 September 1992.
'If Talaric is the Henry Ford [of mannequin makers], Rootstein is the Rolls-Royce,' Townsend says. 'Her older mannequins are collector's items … she's the one who started designing mannequins after celebrity models. Like Joan Collins, Cher and Twiggy.'