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Through hard work, determination, and flexibility, Anna and Laura had
managed to prolong the life of their business, despite the crippling effect
of the introduction of women's ready-to-wear, the competition from proliferating
department stores and specialty shops, and the economic effects of the
Great Depression. While many dressmakers failed, A. & L. Tirocchi began
to sell ready-to-wear, fashion accessories, perfumes, and even household
linens and maintained an edge by offering the same individual attention
to their clients that had always been expected of good dressmakers. Unfortunately,
their energy and strategic readjustment could not stay the passage of
time. After her death, Anna's family carefully packed all of the business
records, wrapped the fabrics, laces, ribbons, and trims in tissue, stowed
them away in the shop, and closed the doors on A. & L. Tirocchi. Laura
and her husband continued to live in the house, but Laura's attention
now turned to her family. Anna bequeathed the house to Laura's only daughter,
Beatrice, on condition that she care for her mother. At Beatrice's death
in 1990, her younger brother and only sibling, Dr. Louis J. Cella, Jr.,
inherited the property. When he opened its doors to the curators from
RISD'S Museum, the world of two early twentieth-century dressmakers and
their clients, and indeed of the apparel industry itself, was called up
from the dust of many years.
The interviews referred to and quoted in this essay are to be found in
the A. & L. Tirocchi Archive, Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design,
Providence [hereafter, Tirocchi Archive]. Such references have not been
footnoted. All letters sent or received by Anna or Laura Tirocchi are
understood to be found in the Tirocchi Archive. See "Note on the A. &
L. Tirocchi Archive, Collection, and Catalogue," p. 23.
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