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Apparently as a result of their varying backgrounds, Glantzberg, who encouraged women to learn textile arts so that they could work professionally, broke up with Fick, whose training was directed towards women keen to produce textiles at home. They split the business into two separate firms.
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Although she had no formal training, Glantzberg and her sisters sewed and created textiles at home, like many other children of the times. Around 1900, she and her sister Ellen moved to Boston where her brother Ernst had emigrated in 1891. The two sisters created a business called The Misses
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Glantzberg kept the name
Birgittaskolan while Fick called hers Sankta Birgittaskolan or Saint Birgitta School. In 1917, Glantzberg moved into fashion, employing two designers to follow Parisian trends creating remarkably daring collections.
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department store, she met Emy Fick. In 1910, they jointly establish
Birgittaskolan in central Stockholm. Offering courses in sewing, embroidery and lace, the firm also satisfied orders for underwear, decorative textiles and rugs.
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in central Sweden, Elisabeth
Margaretha Glantzberg was the daughter of Christian Magnus Glantzberg, a cleric, and Hilda Dorotea Glantzberg, née Arborelius. The youngest child in the family, she had three sisters and a brother.
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Glantzberg which was both a textile school and a retail business displaying
Swedish handicrafts and home furnishings. From 1903, as an active member of
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Glantzberg's business thrived until the mid-1930s. She later returned to her native
Dalarna where she ran a weaving school. She died in
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234:"The (Saint) Birgitta Schools: Dressmaking and Fashion berween Tradition and Renewal in Stockholm, 1910-1935"
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She returned to Sweden in 1909. Working with children's clothing in
Stockholm's
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Märkvärdiga svenska kvinnor: 200 kvinnor som förändrat våra liv
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Swedish textile artist, educator and fashion designer
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236:. The Journal of Dress History, Vol 2, Issue 8
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261:. Albert Bonniers Förlag. pp. 354–.
89:Textile artist, teacher, fashion designer
149:The Society of Arts and Crafts of Boston
106:. After spending several years teaching
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352:People from Malung-Sälen Municipality
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362:20th-century Swedish women educators
327:20th-century Swedish textile artists
342:20th-century Swedish businesspeople
210:. Svenskt kvinnobiografiskt lexikon
337:20th-century Swedish businesswomen
332:20th-century Swedish women artists
110:and promoting Swedish textiles in
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291:Svenskt kvinnobiografiskt lexikon
208:"Elisabeth Margaretha Glantzberg"
357:Swedish women fashion designers
347:20th-century Swedish educators
96:Elisabeth Margareta Glantzberg
56:Elisabeth Margareta Glantzberg
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81:1951 (aged 77–78)
138:Born on 20 October 1873 in
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98:(1873–1951) was a Swedish
322:Swedish fashion designers
317:Swedish textile designers
255:Larsson, Lisbeth (2019).
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232:Carlgren, Maria (2018).
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178:on 10 December 1951.
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112:Boston, Massachusetts
286:Elisabeth Glantzberg
118:she established the
158:Brittaskolan (1910)
130:and everyday wear.
34:Elisabeth Margareta
164:Nordiska Kompaniet
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46:Glantzberg in 1918
268:978-91-0-017935-9
206:Carlgren, Maria.
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238:. Retrieved
212:. Retrieved
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312:1951 deaths
307:1873 births
301:Categories
240:2 November
214:2 November
182:References
18:Glantzberg
134:Biography
124:Stockholm
176:Ă„lvdalen
116:Emy Fick
72:, Sweden
140:Dalarna
108:weaving
70:Dalarna
61: (
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263:ISBN
242:2020
216:2020
78:Died
63:1873
59:1873
52:Born
288:at
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