Karl Lagerfeld – Biography

September 27th, 2007

Born in Hamburg in 1938, Karl Lagerfeld emigrated to Paris at the age of 14. He was to go on to become one of the most celebrated designers this century has seen.

In 1955, at the age of just 17, Lagerfeld was awarded a position at Pierre Balmain, after winning a competition sponsored by the International Wool Secretariat (the coat he had designed for the contest was later put into production by Balmain).

In 1958, he left to take up a job with Jean Patou, which gave him an invaluable knowledge of couture but apparently very little pleasure. After just one year, he quit to work as a freelance designer for such fashion houses as Krizia, Charles Jourdan and Valentino.

By 1964, he had grown so disillusioned with the world of haute couture that he left Paris altogether to study art in Italy.

In 1967, Lagerfeld returned to fashion, joining Fendi as a design consultant. In the 1970’s, however, his name was more closely associated with the house of Chloe, where he was given carte blanche to produce exquisite floaty and feminine ready-to-wear
collections which claimed to rival contemporary couture. His 1972 Deco collection, which consisted of black and white prints and cleverbias-cutting, brought him worldwide acclaim. He produced his last collection for Chloe – now designed by Phoebe Philo – in 1983 to move to Chanel (though he did return briefly in 1993, to replace outgoing designer Martine Sitbon).

At the same time as taking on the title of director of collections and ready-to-wear at Chanel, Lagerfeld launched his own-name label, now synonymous with strong tailoring, combining easy-to-wear cardigan jackets in his favourite bright colours and softly shaped knitwear to create what he describes as “intellectual sexiness”.

Meanwhile his designs for the super-chic French fashion house, a fusion of pre-war Chanel and contemporary trends, carried the label to the pinnacle of high fashion in the Eighties and Nineties. Notable moments of his career at Chanel include teaming the traditional box jacket with denim mini skirts in 1991, combining club-influenced black fishnet body-stockings with the traditional Chanel camellia placed cheekily over the breasts and matching hefty lace-up boots with flowing georgette skirts and leather
jackets.

By 1997, Vogue had crowned him the “unparalleled interpreter of the mood of the moment”. – vogue.com

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      One Response to “Karl Lagerfeld – Biography”

      1. G.W. (1 comments.) says:

        Not to forget the most important achievement – designing the collection for H&M!!!

        ok, ok, maybe not the most important achievement – but it did create a lot of buzz

        http://www.wannabestar.co.uk – for beautiful people

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