Brimming with Style

A tip of the cap to retailers that kept Detroiters looking sharp
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Photographs by Josh Scott

Not so long ago, it was de rigueur for smartly听dressed men and women to don a hat. As the听holiday shopping season kicks into high听gear, we showcase these vintage hatboxes听as a springboard to jump back in time听and remember some long-vanished retailers that kept Detroiters looking their best.

Schiaparelli

High-end, avant-garde retailers carried Elsa Schiaparelli鈥檚 women鈥檚 and men鈥檚 clothes. The Italian designer was often regarded as Coco Chanel鈥檚 most serious rival, and many of Schiaparelli鈥檚 chic but whimsical designs kept Chanel on her toes. Schiaparelli was so fashion-forward that she even collaborated with surrealist artist Salvador Dal铆. Schiaparelli鈥檚 favorite color was shocking pink, as is reflected in this hatbox. She even dubbed her trademark perfume 鈥淪hocking!鈥 and her autobiography was titled Shocking Life.

D.J. Healy

Although its main stock in trade was quality women鈥檚 fashions, Healy鈥檚 also for a time sold fine art, a nod to founder Daniel Joseph Healy鈥檚 interest in collecting paintings. An ad in the 1940听Detroit City Directory听touted the store鈥檚 鈥淔ashions and Fine Arts.鈥 Another ad crowed 鈥淭he Home of Fashion and Quality in Detroit for Over 58 years.鈥 In addition to the flagship downtown store on Woodward, there were several other city and suburban locations. Healy鈥檚 closed in the early听1960s.

B. Siegel Co.

Benjamin Siegel founded his company (known widely as Siegel鈥檚) in 1881. The听six-story flagship store downtown on Woodward originally dealt exclusively in women鈥檚 clothing, but children鈥檚 duds were later added. There was also a busy branch store at Seven Mile and听Livernois听on Detroit鈥檚 Avenue of Fashion. Before long, suburban locations sprang up. For years, Siegel鈥檚 ad tag was 鈥淲here Fashion Reigns.鈥 To the dismay of many women, the company filed for bankruptcy in 1981, a century after its founding. The vacant Woodward location was destroyed by fire.

Irving

Yet another retailer aimed at fashionable women, Irving was at 47 E. Adams St. in the Tudor-style building now occupied by Cheli鈥檚 Chili Bar, owned by former Detroit Red Wing Chris听Chelios. At the top left of this hatbox is a sketch of the building with the words 鈥淔acing Grand Circus Park 鈥︹ underneath. Eventually, Irving also opened a Grosse Pointe location.

碍别谤苍鈥檚

Along with 贬耻诲蝉辞苍鈥檚 and Crowley鈥檚, 碍别谤苍鈥檚 completed the triumvirate of downtown department stores. 碍别谤苍鈥檚 stood at Woodward and Gratiot avenues, although there were was a previous location on Randolph. 碍别谤苍鈥檚 trademark was its clock, and it was common for shoppers to say, 鈥淚鈥檒l meet you under the 碍别谤苍鈥檚 clock.鈥 The store closed in 1959 and was demolished in 1966. Compuware restored the clock and it鈥檚 now at听Woodward and Gratiot.

贬颈尘别濒丑辞肠丑鈥檚

Founded by Wolf听Himelhoch听in downtown Detroit in 1907, the chic emporium catered to fashionable women, although eventually it added men鈥檚 and children鈥檚 clothing. The elegant store had entrances on Woodward Avenue and Washington Boulevard. They branched out with locations in Birmingham, Grosse Pointe, and Dearborn, as well as in selected malls. By late 1978, all stores had closed. The original downtown store still stands and is home to senior apartment housing.

Julie, Inc.

A gift encased in one of Julie鈥檚 trademark pink boxes always harbored a tony听accessory or raiment for a stylish lady. Located inside the Fisher Building in Detroit鈥檚 New Center, Julie was long a magnet for well-appointed women. An ad from the 1965 Meadow Brook Music Festival program succinctly summed up its au courant wares: 鈥淛ulie in the Fisher Building, Detroit: Divine, Exciting Clothes.鈥

Bonwit Teller

With its signature logo of clusters of violets on boxes and bags,听Bonwit听Teller was instantly recognizable. The posh store, headquartered in New York City, opened in the听1890s. 鈥淏onwit鈥檚鈥 opened a Detroit-area store in the late 鈥60s at Somerset Mall (now Somerset Collection). The location was adorned with marble, a plant-filled atrium, and a mural by Richard Lowell听Neas. But the听grande听dame underwent bankruptcy proceedings, and locations closed by 1990. The Somerset store was razed to make way for Neiman Marcus in 1992.

Capper & Capper

Many well-tailored gentlemen flocked to the downtown store in the swanky David Whitney Building for suits, hats, and other accessories, and it was the exclusive Detroit retailer for Hickey Freeman suits. Capper & Capper also had a Chicago location; in later years a suburban store opened at Somerset. This oval-shaped hatbox boasts 鈥淒etroit Outfitters to Gentlemen,鈥 a clear case of truth in advertising. The store shuttered in the late 鈥80s.

奥颈苍办别濒尘补苍鈥檚

Catering to the career woman鈥檚 wardrobe, 奥颈苍办别濒尘补苍鈥檚 had locations all over town. It was typical for a retailer to house its flagship store downtown and then branch out. But 奥颈苍办别濒尘补苍鈥檚 store on Woodward in the central business district didn鈥檛 open until 1956, filling in the location that had been home to Russek鈥檚. Brothers听Isadore听and Leon听Winkelman听opened their first store in 1928, and they spread throughout the Midwest, but by the late听1990s, the company went bankrupt and closed its doors.

Peck & Peck

If听a retailer years ago could boast a tony Washington Boulevard address, it was undoubtedly a luxury emporium. That鈥檚 what Peck & Peck was, which carried its own labeled quality women鈥檚 wear. It was established in New York as a hosiery outlet by siblings George and Edgar Wallace Peck in 1888. In addition to the downtown store, there was another Peck & Peck on听Kercheval听Avenue in Grosse Pointe. There were close to 80 stores nationwide when the retailer sold off its properties in the听1970s.

Best & Co.

Best & Co. was a luxury store on New York鈥檚 Fifth Avenue, but saw opportunity in other upscale markets. The company chose a location on听Kercheval听in Grosse Pointe to showcase its merchandise here. Founded by Albert Best in 1879, Best & Co. also had a section devoted to children, which it dubbed the Lilliputian Bazaar. The retailer closed in 1971, but was briefly revived on a small scale in the late听1990s, only to shutter again.

闯补肠辞产蝉辞苍鈥檚

Synonymous with excellent customer service, top-drawer merchandise, and tasty cuisine, 闯补肠辞产蝉辞苍鈥檚 was a beloved Michigan retailer, although there were also other stores in the Midwest and in Florida. It first opened in Reed City,听Mich., in 1868. The end came in 2002 with its bankruptcy. Even during liquidation, proud employees were persnickety about keeping the store tidy, according to Bruce Allen Kopytek鈥檚 book听闯补肠辞产蝉辞苍鈥檚: I Miss It So!

贬耻诲蝉辞苍鈥檚

The venerable J.L. Hudson Co. was the granddaddy of all Detroit retailers. Its downtown location was the world鈥檚 tallest department store. Women shoppers听at 贬耻诲蝉辞苍鈥檚 could find clothing at several price points, but the most exclusive threads, advertised听on this hatbox, were at The Woodward Shops, which, according to Michael Hauser and Marianne Weldon鈥檚 book听20th-Century听Retailing in Downtown Detroit, opened in 1948 on 贬耻诲蝉辞苍鈥檚 seventh floor. Sadly, the downtown store closed in 1983, but more heartbreaking still was when the hulking structure was imploded in October 1998.