[1] After this, he designed costumes for Broadway theatre productions including Song of the Flames (1925) and Dearest Enemy (1926).
[6] Women dressed by Mooring included Ina Claire and Margaret Leighton.
[2] After working for Elizabeth Arden and other Seventh Avenue establishments, he would return to Bergdorf's in 1960.
[2] In 1962 Mooring moved to Hollywood, where he worked with a designer called Marusia until his death, aged 71, on January 5, 1971, following a stroke.
[2] Garments designed by him are preserved in the Costume Institute at the Metropolitan Museum of Art,[7] and the Fashion Institute of Technology holds a collection of sketches and drawings,[2] as well as archives covering the years 1923 to 1959.