Aoife McBride didn’t lick her fashion and drapery skills off the stones. Her mother, Mary, opened her MacBees boutique in Killarney, Co Kerry, in 1984, but before that, Mary’s parents had been running Crowley’s drapers in Killorglin since 1907.
That’s 114 years of a fashion baton being passed on from mother to daughter and on again. As the third generation coming through the business, Aoife acknowledges her mother’s influence.
“Mum is always impeccably turned out and I love the idea that you get dressed up because you love clothes, no matter what day it is or who you’re going to meet. I remember her coming to pick us up at school. She had her Louise Kennedy power suits in the 80s and beautiful pieces from John Rocha in the 90s and they were always worn with heels even her wellies had heels!”
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Dublin teenagers identifying as punks, skinheads and rude boys describe their tribe.
Punks, skinheads,mackintosh skinheads, ska boys, rude boys, nutty boys, mods, teds, road rockers, Vikings, greasers and gangsters. These are just some of the tribes influencing the young people who congregate around the Dandelion Market on St Stephen’s Green Dublin. The disparate youth tribes are frequently at loggerheads,
Everybody’s against everybody.
What am I? An individual.
A skinhead explains,
We dress in a way we want to, it’s an image, we re just following an image.
A teenage girl defines herself as a punk,
It just means being different from everybody else.