vavavinny - I posted them on the previous page. 
Although when I scanned the interviews, the text didn't come out so clearly, so hopefully you can still read them without too much trouble...
		
 
		
	 
Ah!  Thanks franchini for posting and Berlin for pointing them out 

!  I didn't notice them before!
So far I have read the interviews with Karl Templer and Marie Amelie Sauve--two of my favorite stylists--and they seem to reiterate the same concepts: team work and importance of talent/creativity.  Both seem to be very down to earth in their interviews, something I expected from Templer but not from Sauve, who has recently been given a cold, bitchy reputation by some fashion media outlets.  
I particularly liked Templer's interview because I got the sense that he just wasn't an overnight sensation and that he had to work very hard for the phenomenal career he now has.  I really appreciate the fact that the process of his career was discussed.  I find it very hopeful.  I also liked his comment that fashion imagery is now so ubiquitous that is difficult to produce a truly innovative, unique image.  In this post-post-post-modern time, everything is really a copy or reinterpretation of something else. I think it is nearly possible for someone to produce a completely new, fresh image or concept.
Sauve also offered some fantastic insights.  Could you imagine having your mother scoring you an internship at 
VOGUE PARIS at the age of 18!?!   I wish her mother was mine!  From this tidbit, I assume that she comes from an at least somewhat bourgeois family?  She also mentions that her family is very intellectual, which also makes me think that she is somewhat affluent.  
She could not stop talking about how amazing it is to work at U.S. 
Vogue.  I wonder if this is in a way a subtle backhand at Carine and company?  Maybe not.  There is no denying that she is one of the most talented stylists working in the industry today, and it is such a pleasure to read a very rare interview with her.
Thanks again for pasting franchini 

!