Lucinda Chambers To Depart British Vogue
LUCINDA CHAMBERS has announced that she is to step down from her position as fashion director of British 
Vogue. She will depart this summer after a career spanning 36 years at the publication.
"Lucinda has been the most wonderful creative collaborator, as well  as  friend, throughout my whole editorship," said Alexandra Shulman  today.  "She has produced many of the most influential and inspiring  fashion  shoots in the world during her time as fashion director of this   magazine as well as a huge number of our most remarkable covers. It is   impossible to overstate her vision, commitment, imagination and her   ability to bring the best out of teams that work with her. I, like her   many admirers, will be excited to see what she produces in her next   chapter."
Chambers's creative career  started when she abandoned her secretarial  ambitions and applied for an  art course at Hornsey College of Art.  During her time at college, she  began to make jewellery as a sideline,  selling her creations to friends  and at Camden Lock Market on the  weekends. When one of her pieces made  it on to the pages of a magazine,  it inspired her to write a letter to 
Vogue,  asking for an  interview. She initially assisted a Ms Davies in  accounts, before a  chance encounter with the PA to then-editor Beatrix  Miller led to an  interview, which in turn led to her becoming Miller's  assistant.
          
      After three years in this role, Chambers became  assistant to  Grace Coddington, of whom she says "was, and still is, the  queen bee of  fashion". During her time as Coddington's assistant,  Chambers struck  up a professional friendship with photographer Mario  Testino, which has  lasted to this day and has produced some of the most  iconic images of  our generation. It was after a brief stint at 
Elle magazine that Chambers returned to 
Vogue in July 1992 where she became fashion director.
"I adore British 
Vogue and am so very proud to have been a part of it for so long," Chambers said this afternoon.
Her departure from the title 25 years later comes as 
long-term editor-in-chief Alexandra Shulman steps down. Incoming editor 
Edward Enninful will take over in August, it was announced in April.