This book opens an exciting archive of fashion illustration by Francis
Marshall (1901-1980), whose career coincided with the golden age of
fashion illustration and hand-drawn commercial art of the 1930s-1950s.
For much of the 20th century, Marshall was one of Britain's most
prolific and highly regarded fashion illustrators; his work was
published widely, in Vogue and the DailyMail, and in advertising for
Jaeger, Fortnum and Mason, Liberty, and Elizabeth Arden, as well as in
his own books. During WWII, he worked for the British Navy's camouflage
unit, famous for its ingenious feats of deception. Later he became known
for the 200 covers he illustrated for the romantic fiction of prolific
author Dame Barbara Cartland. This new book shines a light on this
mostly forgotten master, at a time when fashion illustration is very
much in style.