Salvacion Lim-Higgins (January 28, 1920 – September 15, 1990), also known professionally as Slim, was a Filipino fashion designer known for her haute couture. She is considered by many Filipino culture critics to be the mother of the modern terno.
Salvacion Lim-Higgins was born on January 28, 1920, to Luis Samson Lim Katiam and Margarita Navera Diaz.[2] Her father was a Chinese immigrant who was involved in the ship chandler industry while her mother was a housewife.[3] Salvacion had six other siblings.[2]
She would later enroll at the Traphagen School of Design in New York before returning to the Philippines in 1952.[2]
Career
World War II led her to pursue a more practical career in fashion design. After the end of the war, while waiting for school to resume, she sent sketches of her fashion design to the Manila Times, and began going by the trade name "Slim". Along with her elder sister Purificacion and family friend Consuelo Barberan, Slim would set up a fashion design shop in Manila in 1947 which later moved along to what is now Taft Avenue.[2] Slim, would be heavily influenced by Hollywood culture of the 1950s and 1960s and would frequent Europe and New York to study fashion collections, learn techniques, and buy designer clothes to further improve her craft.[3]
In 1960, Slim and Purificacion founded the Slim's Fashion and Art school, the first fashion school in the Philippines.[4][2][5]
Slim briefly retired to become a housewife after getting married in the 1960s but came out of retirement in the mid-1970s. She would open her second shop along Amorsolo Street.[3]
Illness and death
Lim would be diagnosed with lung cancer in the mid-1980s despite being a non-smoker.[3] She died on September 15, 1990.[2]
Lim was married to Hubert Higgins, an Irishexpatriate in the Philippines, with whom they had two children. They married in 1960 when Lim was 40 years old and Higgins was 47.[3][7]