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German fashion designer Karl Lagerfeld dies age 85

  • February 19, 2019

The French fashion house Chanel on Tuesday confirmed that the German-born designer Karl Lagerfeld had died at the age of 85. 

Lagerfeld held a number of top jobs in the fashion world and had an almost unprecedented influence on the industry.

Well-heeled roots

Karl Lagerfeld was born into a wealthy family, on September 10, 1933. His father was a canned milk manufacturer and together with his wife, young Karl and his sister lived in Hamburg’s Blankenese district, home to aristocrats, pretty villas and well-kept parks.

All that changed for Lagerfeld when Hamburg was bombed in July 1944, as the family moved to their estate in Schleswig-Holstein. It was there, in the countryside, that he spent half of his childhood, though his urban origins, affinity to unusual clothing and his long hair made him stand out among the country kids.

Little Karl was quite unusual in other ways as well. Even before starting school, he learned English and French and spent hours up in the attic drawing. He preferred going to museums rather than school, and was fascinated by French painters. “I loved everything that was French … that’s where I wanted to go and that’s why I learned French as a child,” he told filmmaker Gero von Boehm in the 2014 documentary Deutschland, deine Künstler: Karl Lagerfeld (Germany, Your Artists: Karl Lagerfeld).

  • Karl Lagerfeld (picture-alliance/dpa/C. Seidel)

    Karl Lagerfeld, a brand

    Sunglasses and a ponytail

    Karl Lagerfeld’s ponytail and sunglasses made up his signature look. A shirt with a high collar, coat and tie, leather gloves and up to 30 rings on his fingers were just as indispensable. His unmistakable silhouette adorns the logo of his eponymous fashion label.

  • Karl Lagerfeld and a model presenting Coca Cola Light in 2011. (picture-alliance/dpa)

    Karl Lagerfeld, a brand

    Metamorphosis

    “Everything I’ve worn since 2002 is by Dior and Hedi Slimane,” Lagerfeld said. That’s when he lost 40 kilograms (88 pounds) so he could fit into the slim-cut Slimane suits — and wrote a book entitled The Karl Lagerfeld Diet, which is based on eating mainly protein foods. The fashion czar swore by Coca-Cola Light and had even designed a bottle for the product.

  • Karl Lagerfeld and piles of books (picture-alliance/abaca/D. Eric)

    Karl Lagerfeld, a brand

    Karl and his books

    “I just can’t stop buying books,” Lagerfeld once said. They were all over his home. His bed was surrounded by towers of book and shelves line the walls, leaving little room for pictures. Lagerfeld’s collection included about 300,000 books, mainly illustrated books on fashion and art, history and philosophy as well as essays and poems. The latter were his favorite.

  • Karl Lagerfeld holds white cat. (DW)

    Karl Lagerfeld, a brand

    Choupette

    Fashion, books — and then there was his third great passion: his cat, Choupette. The famous “cat who refuses to eat from the floor” has her own staff, Facebook and Twitter accounts and inspired two Chanel collections. “There is something unforgettable about her,” Lagerfeld said. “She is an inspiration for elegance, for posture.”

  • Claudia Schiffer and Karl Lagerfeld. (Imago/Zumapress)

    Karl Lagerfeld, a brand

    Karl and his muses

    Choupette was by no means Lagerfeld’s only muse. Beginning in 1990, he boosted the international top model career of Claudia Schiffer (photo). Baptiste Giabiconi was another source of inspiration. Lagerfeld photographed the young French model himself, and presented the results in illustrated books and exhibitions.

  • Karl Lagerfeld taking a picture of cat on car (Adam Opel AG)

    Karl Lagerfeld, a brand

    The photographer

    In 1987, Lagerfeld took over some of the camerawork for his agency because the advertising campaigns for Chanel didn’t always meet his high aesthetic standards. He shot numerous Chanel campaigns, photographed stars including Nicole Kidman, did fashion portraits for Vogue and made short films for Fendi and other fashion houses. In the above photo, Choupette stars in a campaign for Opel.

  • Karl Lagerfeld and Cara Delevigne on a catwsalk that looks like a supermarket aisle. (picture-alliance/dpa/H. Ballhausen )

    Karl Lagerfeld, a brand

    Legendary remarks

    Sweatpants are a sign of defeat, Lagerfeld famously claimed. People lose control of their lives and “go out on the street in sweatpants,” he added. That was probably not true for the Chanel variety he designed in 2014 as part of a campaign targeting “leisure activities with a professional background,” which was, in fact, how Lagerfeld described his job. “Standing on an assembly line, that’s work.”

  • Karl Lagerfeld and models (picture-alliance/dpa/O. Hoslet)

    Karl Lagerfeld, a brand

    Soul of Chanel

    Lagerfeld’s looks, his quick tongue, his muses and the cult surrounding his Burmese cat were enough to make him a brand in his own right. But first and foremost, he was the soul of the house of Chanel. He had been creating haute couture and pret-a-porter collections up throughout his life. He died on February 19, at the age of 85.

    Author: Bettina Baumann


Read more: Karl Lagerfeld’s most outrageous comments

Paris: Paradise for a young designer

Over the years, the desire to move to Paris grew. After attending a Dior show in Hamburg in 1950, his mind was made up and in 1953 he and his mother moved to the fashion capital. He quickly made a name for himself: At just 20 years of age, he took first place in a fashion competition with a coat design. Yves Saint Laurent also participated, but only finished third.

Just a few years later, he was working with Pierre Balmain and Jean Patou. By 1963, he became artistic director for the first time. At Chloé he set trends himself, founding the Total Look in 1967, the unity of clothing and accessories. Fendi in Rome was also impressed with the young designer from Germany, hiring him in the mid-1960s for his fur and leather collection.

However, Paris retained a special place in Lagerfeld’s life and legacy. Upon his death, Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo said the designer “was not just an embodiment of Paris: he was Paris.” 

“His art gave color and shape to love, to refinement, to the astounding and the wonderful,” she added in a series of condolence tweets.

By 1976, Lagerfeld had acquired his famous dandy look, complete with a distinctive 18th-century-inspired clothing style, ponytail, which he powders himself, and the dark sunglasses that remain his trademark today.

Read more: Karl Lagerfeld’s muses

Makeover for Chanel

Lagerfeld’s landmark career move was in 1983 when then behind-the-times Chanel appointed him creative director. The designer was able to make the label appear more modern and appealing to young women, integrating new colors, modified cuts and other fabrics. Chanel without Lagerfeld? It now seems impossible.

But Lagerfeld was not content with Chanel alone. In 1984, he established his own label, aptly called Karl Lagerfeld, which offers everything from men’s and women’s fashion to children’s clothes and accessories.

Jack-of-all-trades

Yet fashion wasn’t everything for Lagerfeld. A passionate reader and book collector, he also took photographs, created advertising campaigns, made short movies for various fashion companies, designs hotels around the world, founded a publishing company and established his own art gallery.

Immersing himself in work might be linked to having lost his life companion Jacques de Bascher to AIDS in 1989. But it was also typical of Lagerfeld to never be content with the status quo. “You might as well just throw in the towel if you’re just going to rest on your laurels,” he said dryly in the documentary Germany, Your Artists: Karl Lagerfeld

  • German designer Karl Lagerfeld (R) and British model Cara Delevingne (L) take to the catwalk

    High Five: 5 of Karl Lagerfeld’s most outrageous comments

    Lagerfeld on sweatpants

    “Sweatpants are a sign of defeat. You lost control of your life, so you bought some sweatpants,” said the fashion designer on a German talk show in 2012. Two years later, he sent Chanel models out on the catwalk in his own stylish sweatpants and didn’t seem to care. He was true to his motto: I’m not interested in yesterday’s gossip.

  • Fashion designer Karl Lagerfeld with Models Joan Smalls, Cara Delevingne und Lily Donaldson in 2012 in Tokyo (Foto: Getty Images for Chanel/K. Nagahama)

    High Five: 5 of Karl Lagerfeld’s most outrageous comments

    Lagerfeld on beauty

    The fickleness of the fashion world perfectly embodies Karl Lagerfeld. Trends come and go, and there’s certainly plenty of fluctuation when it comes to models on the catwalk. In Lagerfeld’s words: “Anyone considered beautiful today will find it hard to even land a cleaning job tomorrow.” The couturier stayed true to his words, and changed his muses regularly.

  • Lagerfeld and his white cat Choupette

    High Five: 5 of Karl Lagerfeld’s most outrageous comments

    Lagerfeld on cats

    Lagerfeld would never say a bad word about his cat. Choupette was his one-and-only, and she traveled in his private jet around the world eating gourmet food. In 2013, he shocked with this declaration of love: “I never thought that I would fall in love like this with a cat,” he said. “If I could, I would marry Choupette.” Real emotions or a marketing ploy? Regardless, it definitely drew attention.

  • Designer Karl Lagerfeld at Paris Fashion Week in 2014 (Foto: Getty Images/P. Le Segretain)

    High Five: 5 of Karl Lagerfeld’s most outrageous comments

    Lagerfeld on eccentricity

    He powdered his hair white, drove a Rolls-Royce and always wore sunglasses and black gloves. At night, the designer supposedly slept in a long, white nightshirt, in which he also liked to draw. But Lagerfeld didn’t find it funny. “I am very grounded, just not on this Earth,” he said of his lifestyle. Not hard to believe.

  • Designer Lagerfeld draws in 1979 in his atelier in Paris (Foto: picture-alliance/R. Witschel)

    High Five: 5 of Karl Lagerfeld’s most outrageous comments

    Lagerfeld on stress

    He once called for a 48-hour day, because 24 hours simply weren’t enough. Lagerfeld was a workaholic that remained bustling in his 80s. Every year, Chanel’s eight collections featured his works, as did numerous collaborations. His motto was: “I don’t know stress, I know only rhinestones!” A quote that definitely works better in German, where rhinestone is “strass.”

    Author: Antje Binder (sh)


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Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/german-fashion-designer-karl-lagerfeld-dies-age-85/a-47582654?maca=en-rss-en-all-1573-rdf

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