Tuesday, January 6, 2009

French fashion designer Ted Lapidus dies at 79

0 comments
French designer Ted Lapidus (R) holds up the Golden thimble awarded to his son Olivier (L) as best designer for the 1994-1995 Autumn Winter Haute Couture season in Paris in this July 22, 1994 file picture. Fashion designer Ted Lapidus died Monday December 29, 2008 at age 79 in a hospital, his family said.   REUTERS/Nacho Castellano/Files  (FRANCE)

PARIS – Ted Lapidus, the fashion designer who redefined chic with the 1960s unisex look, has died in France. He was 79.

President Nicolas Sarkozy, in an homage to the designer, said Lapidus "democratized French elegance and classicism" and "made fashion accessible to men and women in the street."

Lapidus died of pulmonary problems Monday afternoon at a hospital in Cannes on the Riviera, his sister Rose Torrente-Mett said. He also suffered from leukemia.

Born Edmond Lapidus on June 23, 1929, in Paris, the son of a tailor, Ted Lapidus created his label in 1951, and in 1963 he became a member of the prestigious Paris fashion club that runs haute-couture, La Chambre Syndicale de la Haute Couture.

read for more

7 top celebrity fashions in 2008

0 comments

'Russell Brand’s ruched leggings spawned an entire revival in the genre. He who dares leaves nothing to the imagination'

OK, it wasn’t a perfect year, but when it comes to Great Celluloid Fashion Moments, it was a triumph. This is quite a turn-up, because generally, the Hollywood cigars are so terrified of alienating the public with anything challenging that you end up with the editor of the world’s most powerful fashion magazine played by Meryl Streep dressed as Granny Walton.

read for more

Madonna strikes a pose for Louis Vuitton

0 comments

When Louis Vuitton asked Madonna to be the face of its latest campaign, it made her an offer she couldn’t refuse

Madonna stars in the new Louis Vuitton Advertising Campaign Spring/Summer 2009

Madonna stars in the new Louis Vuitton Advertising Campaign Spring/Summer 2009

“This was really different,” explains Antoine Arnault, communications director of Louis Vuitton, when asked how Madonna came to front the company’s new spring/summer campaign. “Usually, these things take much, much longer,” he explains; a lengthy process of identifying the right person to embody the fashion and luxury-goods brand, the right photographer, the right look for the campaign, plus, of course, all the deal-making a project like this involves. This time, however, pretty much everything was agreed inside a week.

Read more on timesonline.com

My Blog List

Followers

-------------
 

Runway Styles And Fashion Clothing Copyright 2008 Shoppaholic Designed by Ipiet Templates Image by Tadpole's Notez