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Entries in Vogue US (7)

vendredi
août032012

Carine Roitfeld: The It Girl

My darling readers, I have a treat for you... an article titled "The 'It' Girl" in which Hamish Bowles interviews Carine Roitfeld for the November 1996 issue of Vogue... enjoy!

Carine Roitfeld creates potent fashion images, but Hamish Bowles finds it's her own style that's most influential

With a look that combines hippie chic with the provocative edge of a Helmut Newton photograph, French stylist Carine Roitfeld has always stood out from the fashion crowd. But now the crowd is catching up with her sleek take on '70s revivalism. The mix of edgy French style (trouser suits with heels), bad-girl sexiness and ethnic elements (Jane Birkin caftans and Indian shirts) that Roitfeld has been wearing for years is suddenly rampant on this season's runways. What's more, with her smoky sloe eyes and ironed shag of bitter-chocolate hair, she's become a muse for Gucci designer Tom Ford.

"She's one of the most inspirational women I know," says Ford. "I love the way she puts things together unexpectedly. She usually wears one thing that throws the whole thing off. She's my ideal European woman."

While she embodies the subversive sophistication of Ford's Gucci woman, Roitfeld also works with him to translate this image into the advertising campaign. "Tom is a brilliant designer," says Roitfeld. "He doesn't need someone to style his show, but to push, so that it's the same girl in the show and in the campaigns. That's what makes Gucci strong."

It is this synchronicity between what appears on a designer's runway and the image for the campaigns that Roitfeld effects. By pointing the Missonis back to the work they were producing in the early '70s, Roitfeld not only revitalized the house but helped launch an international trend. Look-alike skinny knits cropped up all over this season's hippest runways on girls who looked a lot like Roitfeld herself. "It's not very professional," Roitfeld says with a laugh, "but I do project myself into my pictures; it's what I'd like to wear myself."

Roitfeld's fashion sense is pure but eclectic. "I would never wear a 'total look'; it's not me," she says. She prefers to mix occasional ethnic elements like her signature Indian men's shirts with pieces from designers as diverse as Gucci, Jean Colonna, Eric Bergère, Helmut Lang, Yves Saint Laurent and John Galliano. "I like sexy clothes, that's for sure. And because I don't have an 'obvious' face, I can push that, and it's never going to look tacky."

Roitfeld started her magazine career at 20 Ans and went on the French Elle, where she first met Mario Testino, the photographer with whom she now works almost exclusively (for French Vogue and the ad campaigns of Gucci, Missoni, and Rykiel). They went on to work together at the now defunct French Glamour, creating memorable fashion portfolios like one in which Christy Turlington was dressed as a punk ["Sacrée Christy"]. "I like to use fairly 'normal' clothes in my stories," says Roitfeld. "When we did Christy as a punk, I just used the chain of a Chanel bag around the neck like a dog leash but at the end of the day it's a Chanel bag!" Says Testino of her style, "It's like a mixture of chic with fashion. Carine is never fashion victim, and she is never bourgeois."

One influential 1994 story ["Néo-moderne"] cast Nadja Auermann as the embodiment of the new neo-bourgeois sleek chic — in the serenely contemporary setting of Roitfeld's own seventh-arrondissement apartment. Roitfeld and her husband, Sisley, the creator of the Equipment shirt line, worked with British architect David Chipperfield on the space, a lush belle époque apartment with views of the golden dome of the Invalides. The emphatically non-modernist shell was stripped to the bones, and uplighters were set in the parquet floors to highlight the original detailing. Spare units that appear to float in the apartment hide clothes and even photographs.

Roitfeld admits to having had very bohemian tastes before she met her husband, and the detritus of her early life — kilims from Morocco, furniture found in India — is now banished to her office, where the walls are smothered in her own photographs of her two children, Vladimir and Julia. "I changed a little bit, because Sisley was very Zen, strict and classic in his style. This apartment demands a different way of life, and I appreciate it," she adds. "I used to be very messy; you can't be messy in this apartment. And please, only white flowers!"

Carine Roitfeld photographs and editorials © 1993, 1994, 1996 Condé Nast. All Rights Reserved.

samedi
juin162012

IWTBAR Editor-At-Large: Dara Block

It is my pleasure to announce the promotion of Dara Block to editor-at-large for I Want To Be A Roitfeld! Dara's inimitable eye for greatness and her eloquent observations make her a strong contributor to the team and I am proud to promote her now for her fabulous work thus far. I hope you will join me in congratulating Dara on her new role. Dara, thank you kindly for sharing your talents with us, you are such an inspiration!

Hello everyone, I'm Dara Block!

Yes, I was born and raised in southern California, but I am not your typical Cali girl. To be completely honest, I dislike the sun, have never surfed in the ocean, and I would much rather wear black than color. Perhaps, I am a bit unique for LA standards, but I am just being me. During the day, I am a dental ceramist and by night I am a fashion and style connoisseur. All that is clearly represented in my blog I co-write with my sister entitled sisters in black frocks. Style has always been such a huge part of my life, no matter what shape or form it takes. I could easily spend the day browsing through my extensive magazine collection, which includes countless issues of Vogue Paris. I am particularly fond of Carine Roitfeld's time at the magazine, when she was editor-in-chief from February of 2001 to March of 2011... that really was such a great decade in magazine publishing and I feel Carine Roitfeld totally transformed that era in fashion and styling! 

I think my fascination with Carine Roitfeld started back in August of 2001 when US Vogue profiled her in their first annual age issue. There was just something about the way she appeared in that editorial that really caught my attention. She looked like a gypsy blended with a bit of Iggy Pop and of course, I was completely captivated by her amazing sense of style. It was from that moment on, that I started to really take notice of Vogue Paris and her unerring eye. Interestingly, 12 years later after reading that US Vogue interview I still find myself very much intrigued by her audacious and cutting-edge approach to glamour. It truly is such a pleasure to be part of the IWTBAR team and to share all my thoughts and opinions with our readers on how Carine Roitfeld has inspired my life. She is a total visionary and I love being part of a group of writers that completely understands what an impact she has had and continues to make in the world of fashion!

Dara Block photograph © 2012 Dara Block. Carine Roitfeld photograph © 2001 Condé Nast. All Rights Reserved.

vendredi
juil.022010

Vladimir Restoin-Roitfeld: Disco King

Wow. Vladimir Restoin-Roitfeld was apparently in high spirits at Ferragamo's stellar launch party for their newest fragrance Attimo at The Standard in New York. Sources say it was a red hot night at the latest hot spot, Le Bain, with DJ Kiss spinning. When Vladi wasn't busy trying out the round rooftop bed with hostess Chiara Clemente, he hung out underneath the disco ball downstairs lifting his girlfriend Giovanna Battaglia into the air, twirling her around, and, my personal favorite, "generally snogging." You know a party is in full swing when the general snogging starts... Many thanks to the lovely and talented Brent Murray for his kind permission to share his photographs from the evening with you.

Vladimir Restoin-Roitfeld and Giovanna Battaglia photographs © 2010 Brent Murray. All Rights Reserved.

jeudi
juin032010

Carine Roitfeld: As You Like It

Carine Roitfeld styled this editorial titled "As You Like It" for the February 2000 issue of Vogue US and I don't like it, I love it. Kate Moss models, Mario Testino shoots, and the clothes — ooooo la la ! In this editorial, La Roitfeld takes various pieces of couture and mixes it up to achieve two looks for each, one runway and one reality, both are sheer delights. Among other visual lessons, she teaches us how to wear scorching peony from head to toe, how to pair extravagant pieces like the Hussein Chalayan skirt with understated basics for more wear, and how to dress for space age equestrienne events.

Vogue "As You Like It" editorial image © 2000 Condé Nast. All Rights Reserved.

lundi
févr.222010

Giovanna Battaglia Straight From The Hip

Sarah Mower penned an article titled "Straight From The Hip" for the March issue of Vogue US and Giovanna Battaglia is among the illustrative subjects. Mower theorizes that "a new crop of models and fashion professionals are influencing designers and the public with their distinctive personal style" and naturally Gio made her list. Each model styled herself for the shoot and Giovanna chose a button down shirt by Chloé in classic white and a wraparound skirt by Proenza Schouler in electrifying hues of blue. Tabitha Simmons styled the editorial with Norman Jean Roy shooting, other models selected were Lily Donaldson, Chanel Iman, Karlie Kloss, Sasha Pivovarova, Lauren Santo Domingo [pictured here with Giovanna also wearing Proenza Schouler paired with a jacket by Dolce & Gabbana], Jessica Stam, Vanessa Traina, and Daria Werbowy.

Giovanna Battaglia in Vogue US March 2010 editorial image © 2010 Condé Nast. All Rights Reserved.