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Silk & Lace

50 years of Christine Lingerie
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- Words by Laura Goldstein Photography by Jamie Mann

Designer, entrepreneur and unabashed romantic, Christine Morton is reminiscing about her illustrious career in lingerie from her 4,500-square-foot showroom and workshop in East Vancouver.

When big hair and exaggerated poses of pouting models epitomized 1980s magazine spreads, 鈥渋t was a bit naughty advertising lingerie on real models back then,鈥 she laughs. 鈥淏ut, you know, I was never afraid to take risks.鈥

Risk-taking, an innate ability to reinterpret sensual beauty into sumptuous lingerie enjoyed by every age, as well as a dedicated, loyal workforce鈥攎ore like family than employees鈥攁re the secrets to her success, as she enters her 50th-anniversary year.

鈥淚 call it slow fashion,鈥 she adds, 鈥渨ith incredible attention to details amid this era of mass production.鈥

That鈥檚 an astounding feat for any business in these uncertain times.

Inspired by the films and fashions of femme fatales in the Golden Age of Hollywood cinema鈥攍ike Ginger Rogers, Claudette Colbert and later Lauren Bacall鈥擟hristine took note when they murmured, 鈥淟et me slip into something more comfortable.鈥

(Ironically, she once received an order directly from Lauren Bacall for Coco Silk Pajamas in the 鈥90s!)

Realizing there was an untapped niche for high-end lingerie made in Canada, Christine says, 鈥淚 feel like my business has now come full circle. It started as a cottage industry in my home basement in West Vancouver in the 鈥70s, and I still depend on many home seamstresses, some of whom have worked for me for almost 40 years.鈥

She adds, 鈥淥ur managing director, Raymond Lee, has been with me for six years and is the key to the future of Christine Lingerie.鈥

Looking back on her 50 years in business, she recalls the early days of her career.

鈥淚 had always collected lace (now vintage) from France and Switzerland, hand-made rosettes, and loved the feel of 100 per cent silk on the body,鈥 she says, without a trace of her once-Scottish burr.

鈥淚t was very early days in the 鈥70s, but I decided to take my small collection of silk teddies and tap pants to New York. I walked in the back door of Henri Bendel and I saw all these designers lined up like a cattle call. I just walked past everybody, and the buyer had never seen anything like my pieces. He thought they were 鈥榚xotic鈥 coming from Canada and even displayed them in the Bendel windows!鈥 laughs Christine, who was instrumental in starting a comeback of those styles popularized in the 1920s and the precursor of the bodysuit.

We can thank Madonna for kick-starting the trend in the 鈥80s of wearing lingerie as outerwear as early as her first starring role in the film Desperately Seeking Susan. That trend endures to this day, as Christine so cleverly cultivates. Her use of exquisite silk charmeuse (light in weight with a high sheen) drapes beautifully, and she uses it to create kimonos, caftans, pajama sets and slip dresses equally popular as glam cocktail, evening and resort wear. She has also had several brides wear her silk ensembles as wedding gowns.

It wasn鈥檛 long before film and TV costume designers came calling: from the casts of 鈥70s mega hits, like Dynasty and Dallas, to the recent Netflix series Firefly Lane and Virgin River, both shot in BC, to name only a few. Celebrity devotees of the Christine Lingerie brand include Oprah, Jane Fonda, Gwyneth Paltrow, Demi Lovato and Chrissy Teigen. Several Saudi Arabian princesses have apparently discovered Christine Lingerie online.

Christine adores colour and we watch as a pattern cutter unrolls undulating fabric to lay out swathes of silk.

Her 50th Anniversary Collection features 95 mix-and-match pieces in themed combinations that include: Geisha, a stunning silk kimono, robes and caftan printed in exquisite pastels and Japanese motifs; Sakura, a vibrant mixed floral and geometric print in Italian silk that can be paired with solid saffron-coloured silk crepe and French Calais stretch lace separates; and the enchanting Amelie Collection, including loungewear, robes and slip dresses in black polka-dots printed on pink stretch silk or silk chiffon with black Italian embroidered lace. Magnifique!

鈥淏ut it鈥檚 time to spoil the men too,鈥 says Morton emphatically.

The Morton For Men Tranquility & Spa Collection features mix-and-match loungewear, robes and boxers in 100 per cent silk waffle and silk charmeuse.

Christine still designs and sketches by hand and, in addition to her regular collections, also creates one-of-a-kind elegant pieces for department store Neiman Marcus in New York.

The world鈥檚 refugee problems and community charities in support of women have always been and remain a big part of Christine鈥檚 (and her late husband, David Farris鈥檚) life. They sponsored several 鈥渂oat people鈥 escaping from Laos in 1983, and one of those people, Alina Chang鈥攁 skilled seamstress鈥攃urrently heads up the production department at the company.

Says Christine, now a first-time grandmother: 鈥淚鈥檝e been so blessed to love what I do and be able to sell it! Family, defined in so many ways, is what gives me the most joy and happiness in my life.鈥

Story courtesy of , a Black Press Media publication
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