[1] Joyce Collier later remarried automobile retail agent Drysdale Kilburn;[3] she was an accomplished artist in her own right and was a member of The Royal Society of Miniature Painters, Sculptors & Gravers.
Initially employed in retail at their flagship Regent Street store, Greenwood's artistic flair was recognised and she was put in charge of display.
She remained at Jaeger for almost 30 years, playing a role in the design of their distinctive criss-crossed 'J' logo,[7] and developing a reputation for her innovative and whimsical window dressings: "Post-war at a time of shortage she famously designed an enormous pair of scales for the window of Jaeger's Regent Street shop balancing sheep, representing cashmere sweaters available only for export, against vital imports such as tea, coffee and New Zealand butter.
In 1940 she married British Labour Party politician Tony Greenwood (1911–1982), who entered Parliament as member for Heywood and Radcliffe in a by-election in February 1946, becoming a prominent Cabinet Minister in the 1950s and 1960s.
[5] Overcoming Tony's initial caution, they were both familiar figures at the head of Aldermaston marches in the early 1960s,[10] while their daughter Susanna helped to found CND's youth wing.