Judy Lunn
Lunn won her first writing award at age nine for a story on fire prevention. And while she had a knack for writing, it was fashion that caught her interest. She graduated a year early from Hunter High School in New York City. She attended the Rhode Island School of Design to study fashion design. (She liked to draw and design but hated to sew.) In college she met her husband, Robert, who was a student at Brown University.
They relocated to Houston in 1968 and she took time off to be a stay-at-home mother for her two daughters, Linda and Susan. It was her daughter, Linda, who led to the post of fashion writer. In hopes of earning some change, she knocked on a neighbor’s door with an offer to recite the Pledge of Allegiance for a quarter. That neighbor was the fashion editor of the Houston Post, Lynn Van Deusen. She asked to meet the mother of the precocious child and her fashion journalism began in 1971. Lunn developed the Fashion Today section for the Post and won many national fashion prizes with that section, including a Penney-Missouri Award.
In 1992, she received the first George A. Hough III Award for Overall Superiority in Reporting on the Apparel Industry, a lifetime achievement award. She remained at the Houston Post until 1995, when the Houston Chronicle bought the Post and shut it down. Lunn’s sudden death came from a reaction to a common insect bite in 2003.