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The Rise of the Stylist: A Double-Edged Sword
By CONSTANCE C. R. WHITE
Published: September 1, 1998
Several years ago, about the worst epithet a fashion insider could fling at Ralph Lauren in the face of his undeniable success was to describe him as a stylist. To call a designer a stylist -- the implication being that one's talent is not in creating clothes, but in presenting them -- is no longer a barb. The wall between the two is crumbling, as more stylists become the creative forces behind collections and more successful collections resemble the work of a good stylist.
A stylist's responsibility is not well understood. The job ranges from suggesting how a designer might combine a jacket and skirt for a runway show, to choosing the clothes a rap star will wear in a video or to the MTV Music Awards, to selecting clothes for magazine advertisements and editorial fashion features. Many combine all the roles.
''Stylists help designers complete ideas, and they're very good at helping you with things you don't always have time to think about,'' said Hussein Chalayan, a designer who works with a stylist, Jane Howe. ''They also see a lot of clothes. And they become like a sounding board.''
As design houses go global, seeking to sell a look with widespread appeal through provocative but easily translatable images, the idea of a person who can set the mood for a collection, or suggest just the right shoes to finish off an outfit, has ballooned in importance. This development pleases many, but it is also setting off alarm bells.
''It's become very strong in the last three years,'' said Franca Sozzani, editor in chief of Italian Vogue. ''Years ago, I don't remember so many designers calling and asking me who are the best stylists, and so many designers calling me after shows to complain about stylists.''
It is not just designers who are fueling the demand for stylists, who can earn from $1,000 to $10,000 a day. Now, they are sometimes even attracting investors willing to back them in design businesses. In the last six months, three stylists have become the creative heads of companies: Josh Patner is co-designer for his company, Tuleh; Tony Melillo does the same for Nova, and Alexandra White is creative director for Tocca.
Victoria Bartlett, who with Ms. White, Ms. Ward and Joe McKenna is among the top stylists today, has put together a deal with Nigoria of Japan to create her own lingerie line to be sold in shops bearing her name, for which she will also select other merchandise. The opening of the shops, originally scheduled for November, is on hold because of the Asian financial turmoil.
Mr. Patner, who styled for Donna Karan, Byblos, Nicole Miller and L'Uomo Vogue before crossing over to become a designer, said that the rising status of stylists reflects the accelerated pace of fashion. ''The media demands on fashion have generated a need for more change than fashion inherently has,'' Mr. Patner said. ''The designers need stylists to push them farther than they might go.''
Many designers have stopped designing and become product managers, he added. Stylists help them shape an international style. Quite simply, good style travels better than good design. The advent of global businesses has meant that designers need someone who can bring the advantage of wide travel and the knowledge of what's going on in other design rooms. Not that all designers necessarily want to copy, but they need to know what the pulse at that moment is.
No designer with global ambitions ever simply says, ''I'm selling a design.'' They're selling a life style, and stylists understand best how to capture a look, particularly from the streets, at a time when street influence is important.
Some of today's most successful designers are natural stylists and blur the line between design and styling on the runway. Tom Ford of Gucci, Marc Jacobs and Narciso Rodriguez play as much with mood and how separate pieces are put together as they do with the cut of an armhole. The 1990's may well be remembered as the age of the stylist in fashion. The previous decade was an era of designers whose clothes spoke definitively by themselves: the color and drape of an Armani suit, the fringe of a Chanel outfit by Karl Lagerfeld, the pouf of a Christian Lacroix skirt, the shirring of an Emmanuel Ungaro dress.
from nytimes.com
*my how things have changed...
By CONSTANCE C. R. WHITE
Published: September 1, 1998
Several years ago, about the worst epithet a fashion insider could fling at Ralph Lauren in the face of his undeniable success was to describe him as a stylist. To call a designer a stylist -- the implication being that one's talent is not in creating clothes, but in presenting them -- is no longer a barb. The wall between the two is crumbling, as more stylists become the creative forces behind collections and more successful collections resemble the work of a good stylist.
A stylist's responsibility is not well understood. The job ranges from suggesting how a designer might combine a jacket and skirt for a runway show, to choosing the clothes a rap star will wear in a video or to the MTV Music Awards, to selecting clothes for magazine advertisements and editorial fashion features. Many combine all the roles.
''Stylists help designers complete ideas, and they're very good at helping you with things you don't always have time to think about,'' said Hussein Chalayan, a designer who works with a stylist, Jane Howe. ''They also see a lot of clothes. And they become like a sounding board.''
As design houses go global, seeking to sell a look with widespread appeal through provocative but easily translatable images, the idea of a person who can set the mood for a collection, or suggest just the right shoes to finish off an outfit, has ballooned in importance. This development pleases many, but it is also setting off alarm bells.
''It's become very strong in the last three years,'' said Franca Sozzani, editor in chief of Italian Vogue. ''Years ago, I don't remember so many designers calling and asking me who are the best stylists, and so many designers calling me after shows to complain about stylists.''
It is not just designers who are fueling the demand for stylists, who can earn from $1,000 to $10,000 a day. Now, they are sometimes even attracting investors willing to back them in design businesses. In the last six months, three stylists have become the creative heads of companies: Josh Patner is co-designer for his company, Tuleh; Tony Melillo does the same for Nova, and Alexandra White is creative director for Tocca.
Victoria Bartlett, who with Ms. White, Ms. Ward and Joe McKenna is among the top stylists today, has put together a deal with Nigoria of Japan to create her own lingerie line to be sold in shops bearing her name, for which she will also select other merchandise. The opening of the shops, originally scheduled for November, is on hold because of the Asian financial turmoil.
Mr. Patner, who styled for Donna Karan, Byblos, Nicole Miller and L'Uomo Vogue before crossing over to become a designer, said that the rising status of stylists reflects the accelerated pace of fashion. ''The media demands on fashion have generated a need for more change than fashion inherently has,'' Mr. Patner said. ''The designers need stylists to push them farther than they might go.''
Many designers have stopped designing and become product managers, he added. Stylists help them shape an international style. Quite simply, good style travels better than good design. The advent of global businesses has meant that designers need someone who can bring the advantage of wide travel and the knowledge of what's going on in other design rooms. Not that all designers necessarily want to copy, but they need to know what the pulse at that moment is.
No designer with global ambitions ever simply says, ''I'm selling a design.'' They're selling a life style, and stylists understand best how to capture a look, particularly from the streets, at a time when street influence is important.
Some of today's most successful designers are natural stylists and blur the line between design and styling on the runway. Tom Ford of Gucci, Marc Jacobs and Narciso Rodriguez play as much with mood and how separate pieces are put together as they do with the cut of an armhole. The 1990's may well be remembered as the age of the stylist in fashion. The previous decade was an era of designers whose clothes spoke definitively by themselves: the color and drape of an Armani suit, the fringe of a Chanel outfit by Karl Lagerfeld, the pouf of a Christian Lacroix skirt, the shirring of an Emmanuel Ungaro dress.
from nytimes.com
*my how things have changed...
