Mary Quant: The miniskirt pioneer who defined 60s fashion

British fashion designer Mary Quant, credited with designing the miniskirt that helped to define the Swinging '60s, has died aged 93.

Let's take a look back at her life in pictures.

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In 1955, Quant set up a shop called Bazaar just off the King's Road in London's Chelsea area, where she sold a range of clothes and accessories.

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Her clothes appealed to a new generation of women who had decided they did not want to dress like their mothers.

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She won a scholarship to London's prestigious Goldsmiths College, where she failed to complete her course but did meet future husband and business partner Alexander Plunket Greene.

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It was the miniskirt more than any other garment that came to epitomise the new liberated woman.

Hems had been rising since the late 1950s - but it was Quant who popularised the style and put it out into the mass market.

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An era-defining haircut by iconic stylist Vidal Sassoon was named after Quant, who was one of his celebrity clients.

The cut was a geometric five-point bob, which was worn by the fashion designer and contrasted sharply with the romantic, curly look of the 1950s.

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In 1966 she was awarded an OBE for her contribution to fashion.

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By the 1970s she had begun moving away from clothes design, eventually turning her attention to cosmetics and perfumes.

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The packaging was stamped with her iconic, stylised black-and-white daisy motif.

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Quant stepped back from the cosmetics business that bore her name when she sold it to a Japanese company in 2000.

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In an interview in 2012 she was asked whether she was ever surprised by how successful she had been.

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"I mostly felt, my God, what a marvellous life you had, you are very fortunate," she said. "I think to myself, 'you lucky woman 鈥 how did you have all this fun?'"

She was made a dame in 2015.

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In 2019 the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, which has the largest collection of Quant clothing in the world, presented an exhibition looking at her legacy.

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