Never alone by Bruce Weber

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“Never alone: The story of a Town, a Girl, a Factory and a Rugby team” is what this editorial photographed for Bruce Weber in a Welsh mining valley for Vogue Italia was called.

So much like a documentary or a set of photos from a family album, it takes the commercial aspect out of the typical fashion shoot and turns it into an art form full of emotions that make one think and reflect rather than reach out for a credit card to buy yet another dress or a pair of shoes that so happened to be “in vogue”…

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never alone bruce weber vogue italia september 1997 editorial

Photo source: Vogue Italia September 1997 (photography: Bruce Weber; styling: Joe McKenna; model: Rachel Roberts)

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Calvin Klein, stepping into the future

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Calvin Klein Ltd. started with $10000 and an elevator-facing rented room on the sixth floor of the York Hotel. The 613 housed a small table, a few chairs and changing booth made with a cloth curtain. Phone calls were made. People came and went. Seasons changed. And the precious samples were still hanging on a pipe rack waiting for the big break.

Then one day on a humid spring afternoon the elevator unexpectedly stopped on the six floor. Within seconds, as the doors slid back and forth with a soft whisper, and people continued their journey upstairs, one of them glanced across the hall and noticed the samples. That somebody was Donald O’Brien, the vice president of Bonwit Teller. That quick glance was enough for him to return. After examining each garment one by one O’Brien he asked Klein to bring them to Mildred Custin, the president of Bonwit Teller and one of the most important people in fashion at the time.

On Saturday excited and nervous Calvin put all the clothes on a rack and wheeled it for twenty-three blocks uptown to the Custin’s office.

Although she remained distant and reserve through the entire meeting, Mildred Custin was enchanted by the quality and style of the samples and the charming young man who designed them. After the meeting was over and to Kleins complete astonishment the grande dame of the retail world placed an order for $50000. More over, once the clothes were delivered to the store she broke the rule displaying the collection in all eight windows – a kind of privilege that was normally reserved for the big brands. A week after a dozen of full-paged adverts were published in the New York Times giving Calvin Klein designs a seal of quality.

Suddenly orders were coming in from every big store around the country including Saks Fifth Avenue and Bergdorf Goodman. By the end of their fist financial year Calvin Klein and Barry Schwartz grossed an astonishing one million dollars. They moved to bigger offices and began building their empire.

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In April 1970 Calvin Klein held his very first fashion show introducing a fall collection of fifty pieces, but it was in May 1973 when he really set himself apart from the other designers with his collection of seventy four pieces and “the look” – a voluminous coat and shirt dresses, the pure, clean-cut lines, muted colours and all natural, sensual and luxurious grey flannels, British wools and buttery meltons. A month later Klein was nominated with the Coty American Fashion Critics Award as a designer whose work was “recognisable by its unique “brush stroke” and colour palettes as that of a top painter”.

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Calvin Klein Spring/Summer 1987

Such a sensational success not only allowed Klein to take his business to another level – it gave him an opportunity to fulfil his ideas for dozens of other products from producing a menswear collection containing thousands of items  made of 799 fabrics, creating his first perfume, introducing Calvin Klein jeans and underwear to designing a more affordable CK line as well as accessories and home collections. He was breaking the rules and changing people’s perception of beauty and fashion forever.

His business was, in a way, his life and his ultimate dream. The perfect world of beauty. The perfect world where every stitch, every button and every colour were exactly as he envisioned. The perfect world that had to be protected from people who one way or another, with words or actions led by greed or envy, tried to destroy it. Klein survived everything. The divorce. The drugs. The love. The loss. The gossip. His company became a worldwide phenomenon and his life – somewhat a legend.

“I think it’s more fun if you have the reputation and people don’t know everything - a little mystery isn’t so bad” he said in his interview to Playboy in 1984. Lets leave it at that…

 

Photo source: Calvin Klein photographed by Bruce Weber for LOVE Spring/Summer 2010, issue 3, Time, Calvin Klein Archives

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It’s a boy!

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Finally the baby, the third in line to the throne, the first Prince of Cambridge in 190 years is here. The little prince was born at St Mary’s Hospital, West London, on 22 July at 4:24PM weighing 8lbs 6 oz, and I am celebrating this moment in British history the only way I can – with the most memorable and adorable fashion editorials and campaigns created over the past ten years.

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Photo source: Vogue US July 2002, Vogue Paris October 2006, CR Fashion Book, Vogue Italia September 2007, Vogue US February 2011, Dolce & Gabbana campaign 2013, Glamour Russia April 2010, Vogue, Givenchy campaign 2013, Tiffany & Co. Spring/Summer 2009 campaign, Vogue US November 2008, Vogue Russia May 2012, Vogue UK July 2012, Vogue US July 2002, Vogue US April 2013, Vogue US February 2003, Vogue UK April 2004, Vogue US June 2009, Vogue US April 2011, Vogue US December 2006

 

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I am the cute one!

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They became the new Mattel dolls in 2000 and 2005, faces of Badgley & Mischka campaign in 2006, were ranked as the eleventh-richest women in entertainment in 2007, successfully launched fashion labels, The Row and Elizabeth & James as well as StyleMint, designed clothing lines for Dualstar (the very first label of their own), J.C. Penney and Wal-Mart, published the book Influence, covered Vogue’s Best Dressed issue in 2011 and were nominated for the prestigious CFDA Womenswear Designer of the Year award in 2012.

Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen have been living a dream since they were 9 months old and, for me, are probably the coolest and most fabulous twins. I admit, I don’t really follow them all the time, but when I make a discovery like this little video below, I simply have to share the clip (and their fashion bio) with you.

Now… All together, inhale and go “Awwwwwwwwwwww…”

 

Photo source: Vogue US April 2011

Bohème D’Été

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I have been saving this gorgeous story created by Bruce Weber for the June/July 2005 issue of Vogue Paris because I wanted to use the images to celebrate the beginning of summer. A little bit of sun soaked, sensual, blissful reverie… So absolutely perfect in every way.

P.S. In case you wondered where I’ve disappeared lately… I’ve been dealing with something personal for the last couple of weeks and as a result (and sheer discomfort that stops me from using my computer as much as I’d love/needed to) decided to take a week off blogging. There will still be posts for you to browse in case you feel like stopping by, but I am afraid I won’t be around much until I am better (which will, hopefully, happen in a week or, fingers crossed, sooner…)

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Photo source: Vogue Paris June/July 2005