Vintage Chanel
Chanel No. I
Just her name was enough to define a pair of shoes, a hat, a pocketbook, a suit, perfume, jewelry-an entire look. It conveyed prestige, quality, impeccable taste and unmistakable style. It was a sign of excellence. Coco Chanel had no patience and too much talent, for anything less. By her death last week at 87, the French couturiere had long since established herself as the 20th century's single most important arbiter of fashion.
Her innovations were basic to the wardrobes of generations of women: jersey suits and dresses, the draped turban, the chemise, pleated skirts, the jumper, turtleneck sweaters, the cardigan suit, the blazer, the little black dress, the sling pump, strapless dresses, the trench coat. Sometimes, the determining factor was practicality: Chanel wore bell-bottom trousers in Venice, the better to climb in and out of gondolas and started the pants revolution. Sometimes, it was purely accidental: after singeing her hair, she cut it off completely, made an appearance at the Paris Opéra, and started the craze for bobbed hair. But always, a Chanel idea commanded respect.
Ostrich-Boa Hats. Born outside Paris in 1883, Gabrielle Bonheur Chanel (never called anything but Coco for "Little Pet") was orphaned at six and raised in the desolate province of Auvergne by two aunts. From them, she learned that little girls should sew, sit up straight and speak politely; for sewing, a skill that forever eluded her, Coco substituted horseback riding. From Etienne Balsan, a millionaire cavalry officer who brought her to Paris at 16, Coco acquired the habits and tastes of the wealthy. She liked them--all but the ladies' predilection for ostrich -boa-draped hats. To provide an alternative, she opened a millinery boutique in Deauville,won enough acclaim to set up shop in Paris in 1914.
She started with several hats and "one dress, but a tasteful dress," added sweaters, and within five years had made Maison Chanel a fashion house to reckon with. Coco introduced the tricot sailor frock and the pullover sweater, unearthed wool jersey from its longtime service as underwear fabric and put it to use in soft, clinging dresses. She ushered in gypsy skirts, embroidered silk blouses and accompanying shawls. Even then, Chanel clothes were as high-priced as any Paris couturier's: but only Chanel delighted in having her styles copied--and made accessible at low cost to millions. "There is time for work. And time for love." said Coco Chanel. "That leaves no other time." In the '20s, Chanel filled her off-hours with Arthur ("Boy") Capel, a wealthy English polo player whose lavish gifts of jewels served as the keystones of Coco's astonishing collection, and whose blazer--lent to the designer on a chilly day at the polo grounds--became the source of her famous box jacket. From the Duke of Westminster, Chanel's most renowned amour, came more jewels: these she had copied, setting off the costume-jewelry vogue. With a personal fortune rumored by then to be close to $15 million--most of it the result of the pungent success of Chanel No. 5 --the designer calculated that she had little to gain, and quite a name to lose, from marriage to the Duke. So she finally turned him down, explaining with characteristic bluntness. "There are a lot of duchesses, but only One Coco Chanel."
Cool Reception. In 1938, with the war coming on and the Italian designer Schiaparelli moving in on the fashion front, Chanel retired. For the next 15 years, she shuttled between Vichy and Switzerland returning to reopen her Paris salon in 1954 only to boost lagging perfume sales. Her jersey-and-tweed suits won a cool reception from the press, but soon nearly every knockoff house was competing to turn out the closest replica. Chanel had long since refused to join the cabal designers who tried to prevent style piracy. "I am not an artist," she insisted. "I want my dresses to go out on the street." Out they went by the thousands, easy to copy, because of the straightforward design, and cheap to produce because the fabric was standard. Even a copy of a Chanel could claim its cachet. Private customers paid $700 for the original: buyers. Buyers intent on knockoffs paid close to $1.500.
In the '60s, Coco sprang no surprises, only refinements on what was her classic look: the short, straight, collarless jacket, the slightly flaring skirt and hems that never budged from knee length. Wearing the broad-brimmed Breton hat that was her hallmark, her scissors hanging from a ribbon around her neck, and her four fingers held firmly together in spite of severe arthritis, she would feel for defects. Working directly on the model, she often picked a apart with the point of her scissors, complaining that it was unwearable.
Her fashion empire at her death brought in over $160 million a year. Here clients constituted a litany of the best-dressed women, not of the year but of the century: Princess Grace, Queen Fabiola, Marlene Dietrich, Ingrid Bergman, all the Rothschilds and most of the Rockefellers. A musical version of her life, enhanced by Katharine Hepburn but stripped of most of the real drama, put Coco on Broadway. She was on a first-name basis with people too famous to need first names: Cocteau, Colette, Diaghilev, Dali, Picasso. Yet at the time of her death, the woman Picasso termed "the most sensible in the world" had a Paris wardrobe consisting of only three outfits.
"If Mademoiselle Chanel has reigned over fashion," mused Jean Cocteau some time ago, "it is not because she cut women's hair married silk and wool, put pearls on sweaters, avoided poetic labels on her perfumes, lowered the waistline or raised the waistline and obliged women to follow her directives; it is because--outside of this gracious and robust dictatorship--there is nothing in her era that she has missed."
In addition, please read "Chanel" the article at Style.com (click on Chanel). After reading the articles. Please watch the shows on the links below. There are about five shows from different seasons of Chanel. It will give you an idea of how the present design director Karl Lagerfeld designs Chanel today, but has maintained the signature characteristics of Chanel.
Question: Please identify five signature pieces, styles, fashion trends Coco Chanel made famous. Identify the times she was coming up in -- the events of the time and how they inspired her looks and some of her signature components in her garments. Why do you think some of her styles are still so prominent in most of todays wardrobes?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mpFw4yZ_ubg
http://video.style.com/watch/throwback-thursdays-with-tim-blanks-karl-s-chanel-and-coco-s-chanel-the-evolution-of-a-fashion-house
http://www.style.com/fashionshows/designerdirectory/CHANEL/video/.
Based on what you read and watched about Channel, give me a paragraph about 1. who she was as a designer, 2. why she stood out for her time, 3. how Lagerfeld has kept her vision present (details) in the Chanel designs today and 4. specific styles and ideas in fashion she is known for (not only clothing as referenced in the article). Answer in a post below and remember to post it. Before posting copy and paste what you wrote on a word page in-case it does not post so you have the assignment. It is due on June 1.
3 comments:
Coco Chanel was a designer who revolutionized fashion for woman; she stayed true to what she thought was best, comfort and classy beauty coming together. She was an innovative designer of excellent clothing that woman would want to wear for many reasons and she wanted them to also. She stood out for her time because she was creating fashion for the new present time and future instead of creating fashion that already existed. Lagerfeld has kept her vision present by continuing from her perspective; he creates fashion for today so woman can be excellently dressed for today. he also modernizes her old ideas and designs which keeps it true to her signature look. Coco Chanel is known for many things such as the little black dress, bob hair cut that she invented accidentally, her Chanel no. 5 perfume, her suits and handbags, as well as girls wearing pants. She wore pants because they were more comfortable and convenient and now her designs like that and many others have changed the world of fashion.
-Abby Lashovitz
Coco Chanel was a very inspirational fashion icon during her time and her designs and styles are still present in modern day fashion. Coco was a very strong individual and she always wore what she wanted to which ultimately led to her many creations that were high end yet more comfortable. Her designs were very straightforward and easy to make knock offs of, which she wanted, so people could afford them. Coco is well known for many styles that have revolutionized the fashion world for women. She was well known for her little black dress, Chanel number 5 perfume, and the bob hair cut. Chanel was all about the comfort. She is the one who made it socially acceptable for women to wear pants. Lagerfeld has kept Chanel alive by incorporating her style and previous designs in his modern creations. Coco Chanel had a major impact on the fashion industry as a whole and will forever play a huge role in new designs and styles.
-Emma Sullivan
Miss Coco Chanel was a true lady. She was full of class and good taste, so her designs reflected this. As a designer, she used her sophistication, prestige, perfection, and simplicity to create an iconic look. I think Chanel stood out because she WANTED people to copy her work. Other designers have created giant law suits against those who copy their designs, but Chanel was flattered. Because her designs were simple, they were easy to replicate cheaply, so the average woman could afford it. The company is now run by Lagerfeld who revitalizes Chanel's original work. He says that he has updated Chanel's designs, NOT changed them. Creating variations of her original designs, Lagerfeld creates lines that girls can wear from 15-70. Specific styles Chanel is known for are pleats, the little black dress, women in pants, tweed, jersey fabric, and my favorite: the accidental bob haircut. Chanel's empire is recognized for it's classy style all over the world. Coco is an icon who is never going to be forgotten. -Nina Mozino
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