Brian Duffy (1933–2010) was an English photographer and film producer. Together with his friendly rivals Terence Donovan and David Bailey he made up ‘The Black Trinity’, a soubriquet used by Norman Parkinson to describe his new, highly successful competition. Then, after more than a twenty years at the cutting edge of photography, Duffy vanished from the scene. A rumor spread that he had burned his negatives.
Fashion photography by Brian Duffy in the 1960s
One of the most dynamic and inventive photographers of the 1960s, Duffy was best remembered for his fashion and portrait photography of the 1960s and 1970s. By 1990, he retired from all image making and followed his lifelong passion for furniture restoration and became an accredited BAFRA (British Antique Furniture Restoration Association) restorer.
These vintage photos are part of his work that Brian Duffy took fashion portraits of classic beauties in the 1960s.
Fashion photo by Brian Duffy at the London bus garage, Vogue UK, 1960
Jean Shrimpton, photo by Brian Duffy, Edgewater Road, London, 1960
Fashion shot for Vogue, photo by Brian Duffy, Curzon Street, London, 1961
Judy Dent on Westminster Bridge, in London, photo by Brian Duffy for Vogue, 1961
Celia Hammond in a fashion shot for Vogue, photo by Brian Duffy, Florence, Italy, 1962
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