|BellaDonna|
Active Member
- Joined
- Jun 1, 2008
- Messages
- 3,613
- Reaction score
- 0
this is soo juicy
So better that Alaia seems to think that of himself? Her ego is inexcusable but his is perfectly fine and worth cheering for? That's a twisted bit of logic right there.God bless Alaia! Someone needed to put anna at her place. She probably thinks she's the beginning and end of fashion!
Posted via Mobile Device
while his point about karl remains well-taken, he's really pointing out his own limitations and the limitations of most designers. karl lagerfeld remains a near genius because he can dabble in so many things and still pull it off quite spectacularly. in a year, azzedine may put out forty or fifty truly mind-blowing dresses and karl may put out forty or fifty mind-blowing dresses, but the difference remains that karl has also put out three books, sixteen collections, opened a couple of stores, released some new fragrances and beauty products, thrown six great parties, decorated a new home, photographed for several magazines, and probably earned tens upon tens of millions of dollars (in one year) while making those forty to fifty great dresses. so, yes, true, for a young designer, focus on making the forty to fifty great dresses because not everyone can be karl. and that's why karl is karl.
unfortunately, his criticism of anna wintour may show his age a bit. anna wintour will get venerated in very much the same sense as diana vreeland once did. the stories about her REMAIN legend and while he may not LIKE the point of view of american vogue (as so many don't), there's no denying that it HAS ONE.
post 21
In 1955, the Vreelands moved to a new apartment which was decorated exclusively in red. Diana Vreeland had Billy Baldwin[disambiguation needed] decorate her apartment.[12] She said, "I want this place to look like a garden, but a garden in hell."
I'm totally agree with Alaia. Honestly, I have never like Karl or Anna.
Don't understand me wrong - I don't say it just because of what Alaia said. And something more - I don't hate Karl or Anna. I think they're great. On the other said Karl is farce to me. He made some magnificent things, but nothing more. He annoys me with his ego, his "I-can-make-all-of-it" thing, in fact I don't like Chanel so much...
And Anna - she has a poor, poor taste! She mix things very bad, she has wrong haircut for her... It's not necessary to say a word about Vogue US. Everyone knows it's now a lifestyle magazine not a fashion mag.
Of coure I must admit their achievements. One word is enough - sales. It's all about money and yeah Karl and Anna doing it well. Applause for their mercantile success. Many people adore them and want to be like them, maybe they have their arguments.
So damning
I just let my Vogue subscription run out (last issue Lady Gaga--nice timing). I find the Meisel shoots so incredibly tedious and boring with the models leaping about on the pages each and every month. Yes, there was a time (decades ago) when that was innovative. That time has come and gone. The magazine is a total snooze (much like Anna's wardrobe) and appears to be trading almost entirely on its name at this point.
Yes, Anna does a lot of things to support the industry and that's all very nice, but in an industry that's commonly supposed to be about innovation, I find her lack of it ironic
Manolo Blahnik began his extraordinary career in the Seventies and continues to be a champion of timeless and beautifully crafted designs. His shoes are synonymous with high glamour and full-throttle sex appeal and have become as famous as the women who wear them. Born in 1943 in the Canary Islands to a Spanish mother and Czech father and raised on a banana plantation, Blahnik's formative years could not have been further from the fashion capitals of the world. He began by studying architecture and literature at the University of Geneva but abandoned his studies after just a year in favor of moving to Paris 1968. He moved to London two years later where he worked briefly as a photographer for the Sunday Times and immediately fell into the fashion set, making friends with Paloma Picasso and photographer Eric Boman. During a trip to New York in 1971 with his new friends, Blahnik was introduced to Diana Vreeland, then the editor-in-chief of US Vogue, by Picasso. At the time, Blahnik wanted to be a theatre designer but, once he had been persuaded to show her his sketches and after admiring the shoes he had on - a tiny Edwardian pair from Portobello Market - Vreeland insisted that he "should concentrate on the funny little things on the feet".
^And that is why I love tFS Did Azzedine contact you after the interview was published and was he OK with the way his comments came across and were received by the press? To me it actually does not sound like he has a lot of respect for Karl and Anna