Marie-Amélie Sauvé - Stylist

Love #4 Fall/Winter 10.11
"Hot Stuff"
Photographer: Willy Vanderperre
Styling: Marie-Amélie Sauvé



myfdb via tarsha
 
"detournement de matieres"
VOGUE Paris August 1995
Photographer: Satoshi Saikusa
Fashion Editor: Marie-Amélie Sauvé
Model: Diane Heidkrueger
Make-up: Pascal Guichard
Hair: Valentin




Posted by Mirik / KissMissScan
 
An interview with the website Into The Gloss where she talks about her beauty routine- there is a photo too but I can't seem to get it to work! :/ There are links to the products in the original post ^_^

“You know what I like, and more and more I think it’s important, is to be toned. I try to do the gym every day; it’s good to do something for yourself every day if you can. I have a trainer in New York and in Paris. I do the weights, and also I just bought a stationary bike. For me, it’s the most important thing. When you look soft, that I don’t like at all. Gisele is of course the best body, for me, because she’s doing a lot of different sports. I stopped smoking ten years ago and I don’t drink anymore. I sleep a lot and I eat very healthy. Most of the time I have Japanese food—sushi, sashimi. I love Japan—I love Japanese people, I love the culture, I love the food. They are the most amazing people for beauty, in Japan. They live the longest; they care for themselves so well. The people don’t age! I’m very French because both parents are French and my culture is French but I think because I’m traveling so much I’ve become much more international than a normal French girl. So I feel less and less French in a way, when I talk to my French girlfriends. My girlfriends still go to Le Voltaire in Paris, a very French restaurant, very heavy foods, and sometime I love to do that, but mostly I prefer to eat Japanese. It’s funny because in Paris you still have very traditional restaurants but I don’t eat there much anymore.
Hair is very important I think, no? I always like to brush my hair. I wash it every day. You have to spend a lot of time for everything; I color it, get treatments. I think when I was a kid I was not happy with my hair. It was very thin and very straight and I wanted to have curly hair. I was doing everything—when Linda Evangelista cut her hair, so did I. And I got a perm. That was bad. So I think it’s quite important to have nice hair. In New York I go to Garren for the color and there is a Japanese guy there that I love, who cuts it. And in Paris I go to Leonor Greyl. It’s amazing. It’s a very very famous place in Paris where you can spend all morning and they do an amazing treatment for your hair and scalp. And I use their products a lot—for summer they have an oil, Huile de Palme, you put in while you’re at the beach. And they have the most amazing shampoo that smells so good. I try to go there every month. For facials there is an amazing place in Paris called Joëlle Ciocco. She’s doing the best facial, because you get a full massage of your face and even inside your mouth. And in New York I love to go to Tracie Martyn. Also I try to get massages as often as I can! In Paris it’s really difficult to get a good massage and in New York it’s really easy. Oh and one of my rituals, as soon as I land in Paris I go to an Iyashi Dome. It’s like a donut that you go into, and it’s very very hot, and you sweat a lot. It helps you to detox of course, and you sleep really well afterward and get over jet lag. You know, I don’t wear makeup at all, never ever. The routine is to wash my face day and night with Joëlle Ciocco cleanser, and then a mix of products from Darphin, Dr. Brandt…I have a lot of different creams actually. And I wear sunscreen when I’m at the beach, with a big hat, but I try not to get tan; I don’t like it. I started in fashion when I was 19, and as soon as you start in the fashion business, I don’t know why, but you don’t wear a lot of makeup. Especially when you’re shooting and you see a lot of models, because they are wearing a lot, you avoid it, maybe? It’s a funny thing.”
 
I really love her and I wish she would become the new EIC of Vogue Paris. :heart:

her work is really quintessentially french in so many ways, it would stand as an interesting match up. she's also a genius stylist: she throws gucci animal print over balmain brocade and spices it up with a cavalli fur bag without missing a beat.
 
Roberto Cavalli's 40th Anniversary Book

Roberto%2BCavalli%2Bbook%2Bphoto%2BMert%2BAlas%2Band%2BMarcus%2BPiggott%2Bstylist%2BMarie%2BAmelie%2BSauve%2BNatasha%2BPoly.jpeg


womenmanagement
Model: Natasha Poly
Photographers: Mert Alas and Marcus Piggott
Stylist: Marie Amelie Sauve
Art Director: Fabien Baron
Hair: Paul Hanlon
Makeup: Charlotte Tilbury
Location: 5121 Franklin Avenue, Los Angeles, California, USA
 
Thanks for the image :flower:.
Natasha looks super sexy, love the dress too.
I wish I had the Cavalli book, it looks marvelous. Anyone knows if she styled the whole book ?
^And btw, I would love to see her as VP new EIC, too
 
US Vogue March 2011
"Rebel, Rebel"
Models: Kasia Struss, Anais Mali, Cameron Russell, Liu Wen, Elettra Wiedemann, Joan Smalls, Audrey Marnay, Karlie Kloss, Du Juan & Monika "Jac" Jagaciak
Photographer: Craig McDean
Stylist: Marie-Amélie Sauvé



Scanned by soymilkfreak
 
' Retour à Oxford "
VOGUE Paris September 1993
Photographer: Christopher Griffith
Models: Katia and Gray
Fashion Editor: Marie-Amélie Sauvé
Hair: Jean-Louis David
Make-up: Diane Kendal


BerlinRocks snaps
 
It's great to see her amazing styling back at US Vogue, I missed her. I never knew she had been working for French Vogue since the 90s.
 
Thanks everyone for all the pictures. Love her styling works.
 
Chloe Spring/Summer 2011
David Sims - Photographer
Marie-Amélie Sauvé - Fashion Editor/Stylist
Malgosia Bela - Model
Iselin Steiro - Model
Guido Palau - Hair Stylist
Diane Kendal - Makeup Artist
Ezra Petronio - Art Director
Photo Studio: Pier 59 Studios
Sources: chloe's facebook and zinio via cul8tr and model.com (credits)




Full campaign





HQs


 
I agree with Mikeijames that she is very French in her work. I also think her work for Vogue U.S. is very toned down for it's typical reader. that said, nobody's ed's are as exciting as hers, for me anyway. Although I appreciate the work of lots of other editors, when I see Marie-Amelie Sauve's name, I can't wait to see it because I know I'll be surprised.
 
US Vogue May 2011
"Championship Season"
Models: Arizona Muse & Kasia Struss
Photographer: Craig McDean
Stylist: Marie-Amélie Sauvé



absinthrill.blogspot.com
 
i just got leafing through my may vogue and i must say that her editorial BY FAR remains the best in the book. not only that, it's still very AMERICAN vogue. she shows her genius by layering something as staid as that bottega ensemble OVER that gorgeous versus look. it looks infinitely better together.

and don't even get me going on the high-low mix of new balance sneakers with REED KRAKOFF. :stuart:
 
thanks Burbuja8910 for scanning. this ed is fabulous, don't want to repeat what i said above but it represents exactly what i meant. take classic clothes, give them a sexy twist and there you have what M-AS does so well. exciting next to the usual American Vogue eds. the French have it hands down for me.
 
You're welcome, but they aren't my scans.

US Vogue June 2011
"America the Beautiful"
Model: Isabeli Fontana
Photographer: Craig McDean
Stylist: Marie-Amélie Sauvé



Scanned by honeycombchild
 

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