Made in Preston, Worn By The World

Published 7 April 2026
by rachel

The Harris brings home Preston’s greatest fashion story.

Long before London had heard of accessible luxury, Preston had already cracked it. Horrockses Fashions — born from a Lancashire cotton mill, designed in Preston, sold at Harrods and Selfridges, and worn by the Queen — is coming home.

A Preston Brand That Dressed Royalty

Horrockses started as a cotton firm rooted in the Lancashire textile industry. In the mid-1940s it launched a fashion label that would go on to dress Her Majesty The Queen — who had first pick of every collection, wearing the garments privately before they went on sale — as well as Princess Margaret and the Duchess of Kent.

The brand sent designers to study the Paris collections, hired graduates from the Royal College of Art, and produced two collections a year — 160 dresses each time — at prices ordinary women could save up for. A Horrockses dress meant something. People bought them for weddings, for honeymoons, for the occasions that called for your very best.

The Largest Collection in the Country – Right Here in Preston

The Harris holds the largest museum collection of Horrockses garments anywhere in the UK — over 100  dresses, with around 60 going on display this autumn. It is the first time at The Harris since a major show 25 years ago that this collection has been brought fully to public attention. Alongside them will be original sample sheets, fabric swatches, design books, and photography that show how the label worked from the inside.

The exhibition is curated by Scott Schiavone, Decorative Art Curator at The Harris, who has spent years building the scholarly case for Horrockses and is publishing the first major new book on the subject — Everyday Glamour: Horrockses Fashions from Royalty to Ready to Wear (SCALA) — to coincide with the exhibition.

Exhibition poster for "Horrockses Fashions" at The Harris, showcasing a patterned blue and green dress on a mannequin. Dates: Sept 19-Jan 31. Text: "Everyday Glamour and the Art of British Ready-to-Wear."

Exhibition: Horrockses Fashions: Everyday Glamour & the Art of British Ready-to-Wear,
19 September 2026 – 31 January 2027, Gallery One, The Harris | Free admission.

Do You Have a Horrockses Story?

The team at The Harris would love to hear from anyone with a connection to Horrockses — whether that means memories of working at the mill, a dress that has been passed down through your family, or a photograph of someone you loved wearing one. These stories are part of the fabric of this exhibition and of Preston’s history.

Stories like that of Maryse Addison — described as the best-dressed woman in London in her day — whose brother worked at Horrockses and whose collection of 23 dresses forms a major part of the exhibition. Or of women across Lancashire who saved up weeks’ wages for a dress that made them feel like the most glamorous person in the room.

Nottingham House in Preston was the sole local stockist of Horrockses Fashions dresses. If you or someone in your family shopped there, worked there, or simply stopped to look in the window — we want to hear from you.

An Exhibition Designed to Be Experienced

As well as the dresses themselves, the exhibition will feature a specially designed ‘Horrockses Garden’ installation — an immersive, floral environment inspired by the brand’s famous prints. It will tell the story of why these clothes mattered so much to the women who wore them.

People wanting to share their story can email – [email protected]

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