Anna Dello Russo (September 2010 - February 2011)

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^ totally :heart: The title suits her to a T.

I love that picture collage from Fashion Confidential UK.
 
:huh:
Now of course you know who Anna Dello Russo is. A fashion hero, the saviour of dressing up, and basically our favourite person to stalk and talk to at fashion weeks. She seemed to have appeared from nowhere, but now we can’t imagine fashion week without her. ‘For 20 years no one noticed me – I worked like Cinderella at the bottom of the pile,’ she told WWD. ‘Finally I’ve been invited to the ball.’ Indeed, these days she makes the ball! But by the sound of it, she might give it all up and focus her beady fashion eyes on a career in music. ‘I want to do a record next. Everyone expects me to do a clothes line. It’s too obvious. I want to do the opposite.’ Wow. While we can’t imagine how the song with sound – would it be an ode-to-clothes ballad, a couture rap, or Studio 54 disco? – you can guarantee that the music video would rival Gaga!
graziadaily
 
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twitter/paolozollo
 
Anna Dello Russo: Little Miss Maximalist
Italian stylist Anna Dello Russo pushes fashion to the extreme—not just in her work but in the way she lives. J.J. Martin visits her apartment-cum-closet.

On the second floor of an early-1900s apartment building in Milan sits a Chanel doormat that is shared by two adjacent one-bedroom apartments. The first belongs to 47-year-old fashion director Anna Dello Russo. The second belongs to her clothes—and if you are, say, a crystal Miu Miu stiletto or a leopard-print Lanvin dress, you’ve got all the trappings of an aristocrat in preunified Italy.
The furniture in apartment number two is 19th-century Italian, and the space is filled with a pirate’s booty of glittering designer shoes and costume jewelry. The walls are covered in blown-up photographs of the grand, gilded interiors of Palermo’s Palazzo Gangi, the location for Visconti’s Il Gattopardo; the one concession to modernity is the green marble bathroom and its updated plumbing. “You never know when the clothes might need a bath,” Dello Russo says.
Such a living arrangement might be considered unusual by anyone who didn’t own 4,000 pairs of shoes and 250 black tuxedo jackets and wasn’t 100 percent fueled by fashion. “Anna would eat clothes if she could,” says Sophie Djerlal, a colleague at Vogue Italia, where Dello Russo was a fashion editor in the Nineties.
Back then Dello Russo was, in her own words, dressing “like a man.” But now, having helmed L’Uomo Vogue and served as fashion director of Japanese Vogue, she has morphed into Miss Maximalist—picture the ballsiness of Lady Gaga and the inventory of Imelda Marcos rolled into one supercharged style hurricane. During Fashion Week in Milan, she changes (usually in her chauffeured car) into rare-bird-of-fashion outfits no fewer than two or three times a day. In such getups as a gold sequined minidress by Emilio Pucci at three in the afternoon and a Roksanda Ilincic suit with huge feather humps that conjure a dark-angel linebacker, Dello Russo has become the crowned queen of street-style bloggers, who know that what she wears is likely to be bigger, bolder, and more trendsetting than what will be on the catwalks. “She truly loves fashion,” remarks Scott Schuman, whose Sartorialist blog ardently chronicles the stylist. “What makes her unique is that there’s a real sincerity. She respects the clothes.”
Dello Russo’s fixation came early, and from out of nowhere. “I was crazy about fashion from the day I was born,” she says. As a child in Bari, where she grew up with a psychiatrist father and a not-clothes-obsessed mother, Dello Russo stalked her friends’ mothers’ closets and tortured her Barbies with relentless restylings. Her first important spree was at age 13: a Fendi handbag, umbrella, tissue holder, wallet, and key chain that she wore all together. “It never rains in Bari, so my friends asked, ‘What are you doing with the umbrella?’ And I said, ‘How should I know? It’s part of the look!’”
By high school she was a full-fledged slave to fashion. Once, she wore a pair of yellow shoes that her cat had used as a litter box the night before. They were instrumental to her preplanned all-yellow outfit, so she just rinsed them out. “But it got hot in the classroom, and there was this terrible stink of cat pee,” she recalls. “I had to confess because I didn’t want anyone thinking I had peed in my pants. They all screamed, ‘Couldn’t you have changed your shoes?’”
Such fierce dedication to fashion has only intensified with age. Dello Russo—who keeps her figure like a licorice whip with 6 a.m. swims at the Hotel Principe di Savoia—professes that it takes her “six months” to get dressed. For Fashion Week she will consider only pieces that are strong on shock value and that have never been worn. “The preparation,” she says, sighing, “is truly scientific.”
Just as rigorously mathematical is the layout of apartment number one, which has also been carefully mapped out to accommodate her rotating ensembles. New purchases get front-row treatment in the main walk-in closet, next to her leopard-print bedroom. A zoolike collection of exotic fur coats (“It’s been a bloodbath—furs are my weakness,” she admits) is maintained in labeled cloth bags, while a season’s lesser models get relegated to nonslip hangers in the nosebleed back row. Once the season ends, everything is cleared out (except for the furs, which are exempt from expiration dates) to make way for new loot. Depending on the evicted item’s star wattage, it may go next door, to apartment number two, from which it may or may not emerge. Or it may be exiled to a giant closeted basement: the fashion graveyard. For Dello Russo, if you’re not new, you’re about as good as dead. “I hate vintage clothes,” she says, referring even to last year’s Prada. “I love the smell of a new store, not an old dress.”
Dello Russo prefers the aroma of retail to the smell of food, too. She installed her polished steel kitchen, roughly the size of a drinks cabinet, in a dim corner off the apartment’s main hallway: “I had to choose between a kitchen and more closets, so I took the closets.” (A quick survey of the fingerprint-less cupboards reveals a stock of sunflower seeds and San Pellegrino.) She also had to choose between a husband—whom she wed in 1996 in a dress with a 60-foot train designed by his best man, Stefano Gabbana—and more closets. “It barely lasted,” she says of her marriage. “He said, ‘Isn’t there some closet space for me?’ And I said, ‘No.’”
In her typical easygoing way, Dello Russo laughs at the comedy of the situation. Now her companion in this fashion temple is Cucciolina, a mini*ature pinscher who shares her owner’s wiry frame and golden mane but thankfully hasn’t attempted to lay claim to any storage space. “The only thing she’ll ever wear,” Dello Russo says, “is her Hermès dog collar.”
annadellorusso
 
Sorry for the multiple posts but I just found this amazing cover!
She MUST wear that Balmain dress during next fashion week,it's so screaming ADR! :woot:
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annadellorusso
 
10 Magazine #37 Winter 2011 : Anna Dello Russo by Giampaolo Sgura

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10magazine via behansu
 
as much as i love her i will be very put off if she does an album. hopefully she was just joking.
 
I kind of love that cover. I think this is one of those "haters to the left" moments?
 
as much as i love her i will be very put off if she does an albumhopefully she was just joking.

Same here, she's gone way too far, first her scent and now an album? I still admire and respect her though, but I miss how she used to be a few years ago (kind of "anonymous") .That cover looks great.
 
She defintiely loves her new-found notoriety! :lol:

I do love that she is embracing new technology and isn't such a snob about being mass-market. That's really been the whole point of the rise of fashion blogging...to introduce people like Anna to someone in Middle America or Guam who loves fashion but would never get to see her walking about during fashion week.
 

Anna Dello Russo, Giovanna Battaglia, and Betony Vernon backstage at the Givenchy S/S 2011 show, Paris. Photo Olivier Zahm
Purple-diary.com
 
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at least we know why the flacon for that fragrance looks so regrettable....it's an itsy-bitsy little thing isn't it? and at ten bucks, who could afford to make an authentic looking pump? kudos to her for keep the pricepoint accessible not only because it's smart from a sales perspective in this economy, but it's a great way to show that she's not trying to compete with the big boys. it's just for fun.

and i hope she does the record....why not? if tyra banks could give it a go and kim zolciak could give it a go, why can't she? besides, i can only imagine how fantastic the video will turn out given that one little snippet we saw of her in that sparkly blue balmain.

she is rocking out that balmain dress on the cover of '10'!!!!!

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style.com
 
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