“With only one bag, you can change your outfit completely.”
“Knowing yourself, and learning to love yourself as you are, is the beginning of beauty. I think the most important thing is to show off what’s most beautiful about you and to hide what’s less beautiful.”
“It’s important to keep on keeping on, to feel good about yourself and be happy with who you are.”
“It’s not true that clothes look better on skinny girls; what counts is the attitude.”
“I have no regrets in life, and you know what? If I could, I’d go back and do it all again.”
“Everyone knows that life is very expensive and you can change, you can turn, you can play with clothes with a lot of accessories.”
“I don’t know how to knit.”
“You can have a conversation with your eyes.”
“I hate wasting time getting dressed. I like to put something on and just think, ‘Yes. That’s it.’”
“The key to my collections is sensuality.”
“I care a lot about my looks, although I’m not too adventurous. Every day I dress the same way in a kind of ‘uniform’ of black, although in varying fabrics – it’s always black.”
“Since I didn’t know anything, I did everything I wanted.”
“I am what I am. Before I was not so proud to make fashion. My family thought fashion wasn’t very interesting. So I hid that.”
“What pushes me forward is everything I have learned: political, social, cultural. I put all that into the clothes.”
“I don’t think that clothes have anything to do with the personality. That comes from the woman herself.”
“I became the world’s queen of sweaters without even knowing how one was made.”
“I was fascinated by stripes from the start. On clothing, they follow a woman’s movements.”
“You have to be luxurious nude. It’s difficult to move in the nude in front of a mirror. It’s much easier to move when you’re dressed. But if you can walk around in the nude easily in front of your man, if you can be luxurious in the nude, then you’ve really got it.”
“A woman and a dress, very often, fight against each other because they are not at the same place. Sometimes you see the woman moving the belt around. She is making the robe her own. She needs that. Otherwise, the dress doesn’t exist.”
“Like Picasso, I go through blue periods, green periods, or grey periods.”
“For me, luxury isn’t just the real thing. It’s also fake. Swarovski crystals or real diamonds? It’s a game.”
“At hotels, you are an actress. Absolutely. You can do what you want. Go where you want. I love my home too. But I love to arrive in a hotel. They have books, chocolate, food. I put things in the little refrigerator.”
“I didn’t listen to anyone. I was so violent, so authoritarian, only listening to what I wanted and myself.”
“My shows are about the complete woman who swallows it all. It’s a question of survival.”
“I think in the darkest moments, we need a break.”
“It’s useless to send models out on the runway to cry.”
“First I made a dress because I was pregnant and I wanted to be the most beautiful pregnant woman. Then I made a sweater because I wanted to have one that wasn’t like anyone else’s.”
“People said making clothes inside out was not proper. I disagreed, because clothes that are inside out are as beautiful as a cathedral.”
“Being one step ahead of a fashion trend is not so important to me. What matters is to always forge ahead.”
“I love chocolate. Black chocolate with marshmallow inside, caramel inside. If I could only have two foods, I’d take some fantastic chocolate. And some terrible chocolate. I love the Clark Bar.”
“My breakfast is very important.”
“To be modern is to be aware of what is going on.”
“Fashion should be a kind of bouillon de culture.”
“I was supposed to be a mother like my mother, who didn’t work.”
“I wanted a maternity dress, but I couldn’t find anything I liked. Everything was abominable. So I made one. Then I made a pullover. ‘Elle’ put it on the cover. Then WWD elected me the Queen of Knitwear.”
“I don’t want to show my pain. I resisted; I hesitated. I tried to be invisible, to pretend that nothing was wrong. It’s impossible; it’s not like me.”
“I always believe in pants. You can play with your legs, your attitude, with pants. It’s much more funny. It’s much more sophisticated. It’s much more arrogant, like a man with feminine attitude. I love pants.”
“When a woman confuses what she is with what she wears, then something is wrong inside.”
“My fashion has no time, no season. It doesn’t go out of style. If someone decides that clothes can go out of fashion, then you are deciding a woman can go out of fashion.”
“I want women to learn to find themselves.”
“Wherever I go, I buy shoes.”
“It is interesting to see what other designers do, and not work in a vacuum.”
“Women often stop me in the street.”
“My only ambition was to have 10 children. Fashion was an accident.”
“We are working women. Also, we have the problem of children, of men, to take care of our houses, so many things. I try to explain that in my clothes. They are clothes for everyday life. That is the real life of woman.”
“I have the impression that the women around me are like me – smaller, taller, fatter, thinner – but in fact, we are all the same.”
“My color is black. And black, if it’s worn right, is a scandal.”
“I never played a part in the feminist movement – it touches me, but I am not a militant.”
“To me, the biggest revolution of the 20th century was the pill.”
“The pill was the liberation of the spirit of women.”
“Artifice is art.”
“A dress will never make a woman sexy, fatale, magnificent, mysterious. It’s a way of walking, of standing, or existing, the way you give your hand or your regard. That’s what makes the dress.”
“Women should look at themselves and decide for themselves what color or length they should wear.”
“I’ve never been interested in dressing one woman. What’s interested me was to have a philosophy. It hasn’t been important to put a woman in a blue dress. I wanted to dress women who wanted to look at themselves. To stand out. To be women who were not part of the crowd. A woman who fights and advances.”
“Paris was a melting pot.”
“The Rykiel woman? She doesn’t have time to stop time. She’s too busy running. In her hands she’s carrying a tote, a baby, a book, a camera.”
“As soon as the show is over, I always think, ‘How will the woman I design for go forward?’ It’s so important to start quickly because I can’t let her get away.”
“Everything I do is really an expression of myself, through colors and shapes and, at the same time, I try to explain what I feel not only as a creator but also as a woman. I cannot separate one from the other.”
“I hate the word ‘feminine!’ I mean, there is a woman and a man, and when I say ‘woman,’ it suggests all that is radiant, tender, fascinating, gentle, demoniac, exaggerated! ‘Feminine’ makes me think of somebody who is spindly and over-sweet – I don’t like that!”
“The natures of men and women are very mixed, and for me, the most fascinating type of woman is the one who is a little masculine, has a little of the man in her, and the sort of man who is fabulous is the one who is a little woman, too. It’s impossible not to mix them!”
“A man is attractive when he is slightly disturbing like a woman, a woman when she’s a little disturbing like a man.”
“I’m not brave, I’m not fantastic. I’m like any other woman. I’m unhappy. I’m difficult. I’m sad. Am I strong, too? Maybe, but not always. There are days when I don’t want to see anyone. The most important thing you learn? You can live with it.”
“When I started in fashion, for the first 10 years, I said to myself every day, ‘I’m going to quit tomorrow.’”
“People are going to figure out that I don’t know anything. I always thought I’d be discredited in the end.”
“I invented a sweater so small, so close to the body, that Women’s Wear Daily nicknamed it ‘The Poor Boy Sweater’ and consecrated me queen of knitwear.”
“The lead of a film that wove around me, I played all the roles. I traveled the world; I loved life, pleasure. I adored to write, create.”
“I don’t know why some women don’t wear make-up. Every woman should gild the lily.”
“How can you live the high life if you do not wear high heels? I don’t understand why women wear these ballet pumps. They are only good if you walk like a ballet dancer, and only ballet dancers do that.”
“I am a perfectionist. It has always been this way.”
“I have never followed fashion. What is fashion to me? I just think of things that inspire me, that inspire women, and I design that way.”
“I wasn’t interested in fashion originally. Fashion was for other people.”
“My mother knitted a lot, but I never did; it was no fun.”
“I wanted women wearing my sweaters to give the impression they were naked. The aim wasn’t to impose outfits but to stay as close as possible to women’s bodies and their freedom of movement.”
“I came from an intellectual Parisian family. My father was a watchmaker; my mother was a housewife. We discussed politics, art, sculpture – never fashion.”
“As soon as I am up, I brush my hair. I eat breakfast first: tea and brown bread, and sometimes a fresh fruit juice like orange or grapefruit. I write notes on the previous day in my notebook, then I shower.”
“My first conversation of the day is with my daughter, Nathalie. I call her every morning; it is a ritual.”
“I don’t read e-mails because I hate them.”
“I just can’t live without chocolate – I have between two and six pieces every day.”
“1968 was the beginning of the hippie movement in fashion. That movement made fashion change completely. It was not necessary to be always dressed up. You could be dressed the way you wanted – it was absolute freedom.”
“I don’t think I would ever have plastic surgery; there isn’t anything I’d want to change.”
“My view is that you have to deal with who you are. It’s hard work, in a way, but somebody has to do it.”
“French women famously take care over their appearance, but this wasn’t instilled in me as I grew up. I was taught that beauty comes from different places, from the inside and from the outside.”
“My favourite feature is my hair. It has always made me look different. It was so red when I was born that my mother thought I had blood on my head. When I was a teenager, I looked like a tomboy, but then I understood that I could be a woman who was an intelligent mix between a lady and my mannish side.”
“I was a tomboy, always fairly eccentric, and convinced I’d grow up to be an actress.”
“A woman who walks well parts crowds – it’s something we should all be taught to do.”
Leave a Reply