I Want To Be A Roitfeld

Kellina de Boer
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Dara Block
STYLE EDITOR

CONTRIBUTING EDITORS
Jessica Eritou
Renee Hernandez
Bernie Rothschild

quoi de neuf
   
Carine Roitfeld

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Julia Restoin-Roitfeld

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HOW TO BE A ROITFELD

Beauty Secrets

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IWTB SHOP

Mademoiselle C

Mademoiselle C (2013)
Directed by Fabien Constant

IWTB Interview:
Fabien Constant

ORDER DVD

VIEW TRAILER

CR FASHION BOOK

Harper's Bazaar

carine roitfeld: irreverent
THE LITTLE BLACK JACKET

I Want To Be An Alt

I Want To Be A Coppola

I Want To Be A Battaglia

IWTB RECOMMENDS

Tom Ford
By Tom Ford

 

Yves Saint Laurent 
By Roxanne Lowit

 

The Big Book of the Hamptons
By Michael Shnayerson

 

A Message for You
By Guy Bourdin

 

Dior: The Legendary Images
By Florence Muller

 

Marella Agnelli: The Last Swan
By Maria Agnelli

 

Fashionable Selby
By Todd Selby

 

O.Z. Diary
By Olivier Zahm 

mardi
août212012

Carine Roitfeld's Ten Favorite Songs

Carine Roitfeld compiled her top ten songs for "Fashion Mix," a feature created by Nick Knight's SHOWstudio to showcase the music preferred by various people in the fashion industry. Be sure to check out the musical selections by other fashion notables such as Cathy Horyn, Rick Owens, and Edward Enninful. I was interested to see that so many of Carine's favorite songs appear on film soundtracks and surprised that her karaoke standard, "You're So Vain" by Carly Simon, did not make her list…

"Forbidden Colours"
Ryuichi Sakamoto
Cinemage (1999)
"Forbidden Colours" is composed by Ryuichi Sakamoto and he plays the keyboard on the track; the lyrics are written by David Sylvian and he provides the vocals. A different version of the song was included on the soundtrack for the film Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence initially while this orchestral interpretation appeared on the album Cinemage which was released in 1999. The title of the song references the book Forbidden Colors by Yukio Mishima. Note that this is the song that currently plays in the background on the web site for CR Fashion Book.

"Rain (I Want a Divorce)"
Ryuichi Sakamoto
The Last Emperor (1987)
The song "Rain (I Want a Divorce)" can be found on the soundtrack album for The Last Emperor which won the Academy Award for Best Original Score in 1987.

"Je suis venu te dire que je m'en vais"
Serge Gainsbourg
Vu de l'extérieur (1973)
"Je suis venu te dire que je m'en vais," or in English, "I came to tell you that I'm going," is one of the biggest hits from the album Vu de l'extérieur by Serge Gainsbourg. Released in 1973, Vu de l'extérieur (or in English, Exterior View) is widely considered to be one of Gainsbourg's best albums although if you listen closely, you may be surprised to learn that he is singing mostly about bodily functions and their associated noises.

"Dieu est un fumeur de gitane"
Serge Gainsbourg avec Catherine Deneuve
Initials SG (1980)
"Dieu est un fumeur de gitane" is a duet by Serge Gainsbourg and Catherine Deneuve that is collected on Initials SG, an album of his greatest hits. If you are not familiar with the work of Gainsbourg, Initials SG is a wonderful introduction.

"Your Song"
Elton John
Elton John (1970)
The ballad "Your Song," composed by Elton John, with lyrics by Bernie Taupin, was released on his eponymous album in 1970. Regarding his first pop hit John has stated, "I don't think I have written a love song as good since," although it took him only ten minutes to compose the music once Taupin had written the lyrics.

"My Way"
Sid Vicious
The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle (1980)
"My Way" is a song written in 1969 by Paul Anka based on the 1967 French song "Comme d'habitude" by Claude François and Jacques Revaux. The tune was made popular by Frank Sinatra but it is the cover of "My Way" by Sid Vicious that Carine prefers. As the bassist for the British punk rock band the Sex Pistols, Vicious naturally sped up the original arrangement and modified the lyrics to lend the song a punk edge. His rendition appeared on the soundtrack of the film The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle. I was interested to learn that Anka actually liked the Vicious version: "It was kind of curious, but I felt he was sincere about it."

"Life on Mars?"
David Bowie
Hunky Dory (1971)
In a fascinating connection to the song above, David Bowie wrote "Even a Fool Learns to Love" in 1968, setting his lyrics to the music of "Comme d'habitude" by Claude François and Jacques Revaux, the same tune that inspired "My Way." Although Bowie never released his original song, the success that Frank Sinatra had with Paul Anka's version inspired the young Bowie to write "Life on Mars?" to parody Sinatra's song. Bowie shares with us the conditions under which he wrote his glam rock anthem: "Workspace was a big empty room with a chaise longue; a bargain-price art nouveau screen ('William Morris,' so I told anyone who asked); a huge overflowing freestanding ashtray and a grand piano. Little else. I started working it out on the piano and had the whole lyric and melody finished by late afternoon."

"Each Man Kills the Thing He Loves"
Jeanne Moreau
Querelle (1982)
In 1982, Jeanne Moreau starred in the film Querelle in the role of Lysiane, the madam of a brothel and the subject of competition for two brothers. Adapted from the novel Querelle de Brest written by Jean Genet in 1947, this German film was the last for director Rainer Werner Fassbinder for sadly he died of a drug overdose before the film was released. Moreau sings two songs in the film and Carine's favorite, "Each Man Kills the Thing He Loves," takes its lyrics from the poem "The Ballad of Reading Gaol" by Oscar Wilde.

View Jeanne Moreau singing "Each Man Kills the Thing He Loves"

"La chanson d'Hélène"
Romy Schneider
Les choses de la vie (1970)
"La chanson d'Hélène" is a song performed by Romy Schneider in the 1970 film Les choses de la vie (or in English, The Things of Life). Directed by Claude Sautet, Les choses de la vie was among the films nominated for the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival. The lovely actress and singer inspires not only Carine… her daughter Julia named her baby Romy Nicole, in tribute to Schneider and to the baby's great grandmother, Nicola.

View Romy Schneider singing "La chanson d'Hélène"

"The Look of Love"
Willie Bobo
Talkin' Verve (1997)
Burt Bacharach originally composed "The Look of Love" as an instrumental but later decided to add lyrics, releasing it as a pop song in 1967 for the film Casino Royale. Dusty Springfield sang on the soundtrack recording as engineered by Phil Ramone. Carine's favorite version of "The Look of Love" is by Willie Bobo and appears on his album Talkin' Verve. In addition to making his own music, Bobo spent time in various jazz lineups with Cal Tjader, Tito Puente, George Shearing, and Mongo Santamaria and his ideas helped to revolutionize Latin music. I might have pegged Carine as a timbales aficionado…

Carine Roitfeld photograph courtesy of purple.fr. Album cover art courtesy of amazon.com.

vendredi
août172012

Carine Roitfeld For VMAN #27

I do not know if it was Carine Roitfeld's choice to use Tom Brady for the cover of VMAN #27, the Fall 2012 issue, but I heartily applaud the decision. This fine specimen of manhood is also known as Mr. Gisele Bündchen for those of you that do not follow the New England Patriots, the football team that Brady quarterbacks. Carine referred to Monsieur Brady as "lovely" in her interview with Harper's Bazaar this week, she was pleased to be seated with him and Gisele at the most recent Met Ball. Mario Testino shot the fierce editorial in which Brady poses with a menacing Doberman Pinscher, masterful in tuxedos by Givenchy, Ermenegildo Zegna, Calvin Klein, and Ralph Lauren accented by a studded dog collar by Trixie + Peanut. As an added bonus, Brady was interviewed for the issue by Tom Ford. The Fall edition of VMAN can be found on select newsstands beginning 23 August.

Editorial photograph © 2012 VMAN, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

jeudi
août162012

Carine Roitfeld: Le Petit Prince Est De Retour

As we anxiously await the release of CR Fashion Book, I am passing the time by looking back at the body of work composed by Carine Roitfeld over the years. It is a delight to share with you an editorial from the February 1996 issue of Vogue Paris titled "Le Petit Prince est de Retour," in which Carine takes inspiration from Le Petit Prince (or in English, The Little Prince) written and illustrated by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry. Originally published in 1943, Le Petit Prince tells the story of a little prince who falls to Earth, befriends a fox, tames a rose, and discovers the meaning of life: "On ne voit bien qu'avec le cœur. L'essentiel est invisible pour les yeux." (or in English, "One sees clearly only with the heart. What is essential is invisible to the eye."). This profound story is the most widely read book ever published in the French language and one of the world's best sellers.

Carine Roitfeld pays tribute to the tender tale with her return of the Little Prince, styling model Carolyn Murphy in the same fashion as the young prince is typically dressed — a short-sleeved, collared shirt; billowing wide-legged pants; and his sartorial signature, the flowing scarf. I love the placement of the single red rose beside the model to set the scene in the opening shot, c'est magnifique. I enjoyed Carine's caption also: "La netteté d'un uniforme, l'aisance d'un polo, l'ironie de matières qui flirtent avec le quotidien le plus ordinaire. Un petit air d'hôtesse d l'air, c'est rassurant." or in English, "The sharpness of a uniform, the ease of a polo, the irony of materials that flirt with the most ordinary everyday. A slight air of an air hostess, it is reassuring." Now for the return of our little princess...

Vogue Paris editorial images © 1996 Condé Nast. All Rights Reserved.

dimanche
août122012

Roitfeld Beauty Secret: Confidence

Our delightful editor-at-large Kate Ringo Suzuki has encouraging news for all of us: it is possible to share in Carine Roitfeld's secret to beauty and it is absolutely free! Please read on to learn for yourself how you, too, can have that Roitfeld je ne sais quoi in just three easy steps… I am confident you will enjoy the lesson. Thanks for breaking it down, Kate!

Roitfeld Beauty Secret: Confidence
By Kate Ringo Suzuki

Equipment shirt… Check.

Balenciaga pencil skirt… Check.

Alaïa heels… Check.

Kohl rimmed eyes… Check.

There you go, you have the signature Carine Roitfeld look. You're welcome.

Wait a minute, not so fast! If you truly desire to emulate the compelling allure of La Roitfeld, forgo a spending spree at Barneys, it is unnecessary. I am going to let you in on a little secret — the secret to grabbing up Carine Roitfeld style! And by the way, I know it is hard to believe but her beauty secret comes absolutely free of charge. It can be had by all!

Come closer and I’ll whisper it into your ear. Shhhhhh… Carine Roitfeld’s most potent beauty elixir is timeless, enduring, free (did I mention free?), and completely intoxicating to everyone in her presence. Her beauty secret is called: Confidence. Not sold in a Sephora near you, I can assure you of that.

Here is my big promise: Follow these guidelines and you can project confidence, too.

  1. Carine Roitfeld understands that youthfulness is a state of being. She is not obsessed with looking young because she is too busy enjoying life. She has l'art de vivre down pat. Although she is a very busy woman, she never appears to be burned out. On the contrary, Ms. Roitfeld retains a sense of fun. You need only to watch any interview of her on YouTube to see it for yourself. She is sharp and witty, light and charming.
  2. Carine Roitfeld always appears to be comfortable in her own skin. This is a woman who has no qualms about being photographed (fabulously) wearing nothing more than a black thong and white pumps. Ok, fine. It helps that she has a figure that many 25 year olds dream of having, but let us not overlook the power of Confident Body Language, otherwise known as C.B.L. Grab up any photo of Carine Roitfeld and you will see that her shoulders are relaxed, her chin is up, and her eyes pierce through like a tigress stalking its prey.
  3. Carine Roitfeld has jolie laide (or in English, pretty ugly). She parades her quirky good looks with pride. Eyebrows remain ungroomed (all the more to dramatically frame her tigress gaze), and her face exhibits pleasing lines when she smiles (the anti-New York look). And no, despite numerous fashion writers’ claims, for the last time, no, she does not look like Iggy Pop, for crying out loud. She is much prettier than Iggy Pop. And much more refined. I am confident enough to say this.

Don’t forget the three magical ingredients to intoxicating confidence: Have some fun, remember your C.B.L., and parade your quirky good looks with pride!

Carine Roitfeld photographs © 2010 Alexandra De Lapierre and courtesy of alltheprettybirds.blogspot.com and Fashion Spot.

samedi
août112012

Looking Back: Carine Roitfeld Talks To Talk

An alternate title might have been "Carine Rottweiler Gets High On High-Heels"... In April 2001, Talk Magazine published a special issue that focused on Innovators and Navigators: 50 Risk Takers, Idea Makers, and Hell Raisers, with Carine Roitfeld obviously scoring high marks in all three categories. Carine gives a candid and charming interview in which she bums a cigarette from the interviewer and reveals that among her deepest desires she hopes to become a film star eventually. Just when I think I could not admire her more, a gem like this turns up… CR… chic, intelligente, drôle, parfaite… Merci mille fois to our visionary editor-at-large Dara Block for this wonderful look at the past.

Looking Back: Carine Roitfeld and Talk Magazine, April 2001
By Dara Block

As we all know, September marks the debut of Carine Roitfeld's most ambitious project yet: her very own fashion publication entitled CR that will most likely take style, creativity, and cutting-edge glamour to a whole new and exciting level. Carine Roitfeld eloquently stated her vision for CR in the latest issue of V and if you haven't seen the magazine yet, I highly suggest you pick up a copy before it leaves newsstands on August 30th... it is a total must have. Just in case you missed this part of the magazine, here is what she beautifully stated inside the pages:

We all love fashion. Fashion is what drives us. But lately it seems more and more difficult to express creativity in fashion — things are controlled, calculated, rarely spontaneous. Yet creativity is the root of fashion. Without it, fashion ceases to exist. What fashion needs is a new place for creative visions to unfold. Fashion beyond clothes. Fashion as a way of life. Never too serious, never dark or negative. Always full of humor, fantasy, joy, and beauty. Imagine a publication that pushes fashion forward, that celebrates the greatest creators in image-making while supporting a new guard of brilliant talent — as well as providing valuable insight into the world of fashion and beyond. This is my vision for CR, a new magazine about fashion and creativity.

Personally, I can totally understand her viewpoint and how she sees the current state of fashion! Her outlook is a bit harsh, truthful, but overall very optimistic! With all that in mind, I was recently looking through my magazine archives and stumbled upon an old issue of Talk Magazine. If you need to be refreshed, Talk Magazine was launched in 1999 by Tina Brown (former editor of The New Yorker, Vanity Fair, and Tatler) as a joint venture between Miramax and Hearst Publishing. The magazine generated a lot of buzz for its in-depth celebrity profiles and interviews. Sadly, the magazine never became a huge commercial success and was shut down in 2002. Despite the failure, Carine Roitfeld gave a very fascinating interview with the magazine back in April of 2001 for their special Innovators and Navigators issue. The interview was published right about the time she became the editor-in-chief of Vogue Paris. For some reason, I thought now seemed like a perfect time to share the conversation especially since she is currently taking on a new adventure in her life with CR. It is interesting to see the parallels from her outlook on fashion in 2001 and today in 2012! Let's take a closer look at this intriguing interview!

Customs officials mistake Carine Roitfeld for a junkie, but the new editor-in-chief of French Vogue is a woman of cutting-edge style.

Carine Roitfeld: Give me a quick puff of your cigarette.

Talk: You don't smoke.

Roitfeld: My father smokes, my husband smokes, and I always seem to be floating around in a cloud of cigarette smoke. Not that that bothers me, as I must say there's nothing sexier than the smell of tobacco on a man's fingers. Unfortunately smoking comes accompanied with a beautiful movement as addictive as the tobacco itself, which is why I need yours. At the end of the day it's all about movement, the way you carry yourself (Roitfeld keeps the cigarette).

Talk: Now that you're editor-in-chief of French Vogue, do they stop you at customs because they think you look like a junkie?

Roitfeld: I always get stopped at the airport, and it drives me mad. I don't know whether it's because I look like a junkie or whether it's because I look different from other people traveling. Everybody else is always in jeans and sneakers, and then there's me in high heels and a skirt. Perhaps they stop me because I am more chic than the rest of the passengers. But that's no reason to hassle me and rummage through my bags. I'm sure that while they're poking their noses into my bags drugs dealers are slipping past. It's my prerogative to travel in style, and I can't help it if I look like Iggy Pop and wear high heels. I don't smoke, I don't drink, and to my knowledge nobody has ever been arrested for being too chic, so I wish they'd lay off.

Talk: So you get high on high-heels?

Roitfeld: I started wearing them when I started working with Mario Testino, because he's very tall and I hate looking up at people. Let alone looking up to people. You walk differently in heels, you feel more womanly, you get used to the silhouette, and before you know it you can't come down a single inch. It's true you can't run in heels, but a woman should never run anyway — it's sometimes moving, but never chic.

Talk: Your sharp sense of style and unerring eye have earned you the nickname "Carine Rottweiler," Do you think being editor-in-chief is going to worsen matters?

Roitfeld: No, because I've learned how to smile for the cameras.

Talk: Do you smile when you see a dress you like on the catwalk?

Roitfeld: When I see a dress I like on the catwalk I don't smile. I'm too busy imagining what I'd look like wearing it.

Talk: How long does it take you to get dressed in the morning?

Roitfeld: How long does it take me to think of what I'm going to wear, or how long does it take me to actually get dressed? They're two different things. I spend about five minutes pondering such burning fashion questions while sipping my tea in the morning, and then another 10 minutes in my closet. It's quite quick. My clothes are very neatly arranged, and I tend to opt for the same pieces, the same style, the same Manolo Blahniks. I've got a style that I stick to, and I hate not looking like myself. But that rarely happens.

Talk: While most fashion editors cut and paste looks from the catwalk onto the pages of their magazines, you've always mixed and matched clothes from different designers.

Roitfeld: I think it's a very French trait to mix and match clothes rather than blindly follow the dictates of the catwalk. I'm sure that designers would rather see total looks in magazines, and magazines such as L'Officiel are more than happy to oblige, but I like to think that a fashion editor's job is more exciting than just picking outfits off the catwalk and slapping them onto the pages of a magazine.

Talk: Why did Joan Buck's editorship of French Vogue end?

Roitfeld: The stakes were high, and I think that Joan certainly succeeded in strengthening the magazine's sales. Condé Nast is not a business run by choirboys and Joan was at Vogue for a long time (from June 1994), which means the magazine was working commercially. Joan was a fiercely intelligent and gifted editor, but perhaps she had a more intellectual than visual sensitivity. I respect and admire her, and I hope she's not mad at me. But Vogue will now be very different. I'm not saying that it will be better, but it will certainly be more focused on fashion and photography. 

Talk: Are you hoping to reconnect with French Vogue's traditional role as a photographic showcase-as in the days when Horst, Man Ray, Guy Bourdin, and Helmut Newton shot for the magazine?

Roitfeld: The features need to be strong, because French women are far from stupid. But I think that visually the magazine could do with a sharper edge. I'm going to launch a charm offensive on people like Helmut Newton to get him to contribute to the magazine. I've changed the whole of the fashion desk, and we've been compiling a dream team of photographers. Newton is the top of the list. Mario Testino, Inez Van Lamsweerde, Terry Richardson, and Nathaniel Goldberg have already shot for our February issue, but I still have to try and chat up the likes of Craig McDean and David Sims before we have a strong stable of photographers. I think my new job is going to involve a great deal of flirting.

Talk: Why did you wear Azzedine Alaïa to the Oscars, and not Gucci?

Roitfeld: Because you don't want to end up looking like everybody else on Oscar night. Besides, I've known Azzedine for ages and didn't have to wait until his "comeback" to wear his dresses.

Talk: Smoky eyes, rock & roll hair, and high heels — you've always been Tom Ford's muse and the archetypal Gucci girl. How are you going to shed this image to become the Vogue woman? 

Roitfeld: Tom Ford didn't invent me, even though my work for Gucci did put me in the public eye. I looked like this long before I started working for Gucci, so why should I change for Vogue? Although Tom sees me as his female counterpart, I'm no more the Gucci girl than I am the Saint Laurent girl or the Vogue girl. I'm me — take it or leave it. My heart belongs to Daddy.

Talk: With Kate Moss on the cover, photographs by Mario Testino, a profile of Tom Ford, and the same black-and-white theme as Ford's Saint Laurent collection inside, doesn't your first issue of French Vogue look more like a Gucci or Saint Laurent catalog?

Roitfeld: No. Look carefully and you'll see that there's also some Dior. It's a coincidence if Kate Moss is both on our cover and in the Gucci ad campaign. Besides, she's wearing Balenciaga on the cover. Balenciaga was the show of the season, Kate Moss was the face of the season, Tom Ford is staging a huge Pop Art exhibition at the Pompidou Center and has just shown his first collection for Saint Laurent. I don't see why running key stories and strong fashion means that I've sold my soul.

Talk: Are you going to continue consulting for Saint Laurent and Gucci now that you're editor-in-chief of French Vogue

Roitfeld: I'll only officially be starting at French Vogue on April 2, after the prêt-à-porter shows that I'm still under contract to consult on. After that I'll be too tied up at Vogue to work for anybody else. I like new challenges, though. Maybe one day I'll become a film star. I'd love to become a film star.

Talk: French art house or Hollywood blockbuster?

Roitfeld: Hollywood, of course! It would have to be international, though. What do you think? A remake of The Night Porter with me instead of Charlotte Rampling? One of the reasons it wouldn't be a French film is because your country of origin is always the last to recognize your talent. The English were the first to run big articles on me — funnily enough, because we all know how much the Brits hate foreigners. Mind you, I was all the more flattered.

Talk: How did you feel after the press panned the Gucci show?

Roifeld: It wasn't constructive criticism; it was sheer nastiness. When you reach the top, people are eager to shoot you down.

Talk: Why do you think critics are out to get Ford?

Roitfeld: Because in the fashion business he comes across as the man who has it all, and people don't know him. I remember when he started at Gucci and he called Mario and me to work on his campaigns. Neither of us had heard of him. He didn't become a millionaire overnight, and his success didn't fall out of a tree. If he is where he is now it's through determination and hard work. Parisians seem to have this image of a Texan galloping into town with a Stetson to lasso their best horse: Saint Laurent. But Tom knew that the Saint Laurent steed was going to be hard to harness.

Talk: Do you feel prepared for such a high-profile position?

Roitfeld: I'm not used to hogging the limelight, and I don't particularly like giving interviews, but I'd rather see something I said in a magazine than something I didn't. I wasn't surprised when Condé Nast put me at the helm of French Vogue, for instance, because I'd already read all about it in the papers.

Talk: What editorial voice do you want to give the magazine?

Roitfeld: My own. I'm the archetypal Vogue reader. I enjoy shopping, I understand fashion, I go out, so I imagine I'd be bang on target in a readership survey. My prime concern is going to be, Do I want to go see that film? Do I want to go wear that dress? Am I interested? And I want people to be able to see the clothes clearly enough in the magazine to want to buy them. They must want to look like the girl on the cover. I'm not interested in wispy haired underage nymphets in diaphanous slips sitting morosely in the corner of a page with their backs to the camera. I want to project the image of a woman who's strong, healthy, confident. A real woman. 

Talk: How can you be a style icon and a mother of two?

Roitfeld: I wouldn't say I'm disciplined, because there' s something a little sad about disciplined people. But I'm pretty organized.

Talk: Why do you think Yves Saint Laurent showed up at Hedi Slimane's first show for Dior but not at Ford's show for YSL Rive Gauche?

Roitfeld: I think that Yves Saint Laurent, Pierre Bergé, and Catherine Deneuve were at Dior to encourage their former protégé. It's Parisian snobbery. I always find it sad when fashion is reduced to petty political questions of who's sitting in the front row and where. The battle between LVMH and Gucci is looking more and more like The Empire Strikes Back, and I'm fully aware that with my new position I'm going to be caught in the line of fire. It's hard treading on eggshells when you're wearing high heels.

As we can see from this clever and in-depth Talk Magazine interview... Carine Roitfeld was the same person in 2001 as she is still today in 2012! Roitfeld's knowledge of fashion, style, and glamour, as well as her sharp sense of humor has not changed at all throughout the years. She is always herself and has never conformed to anyone else's vision. I truly believe that her new publication CR will be filled with just as much as humor, fantasy, charm, and allure much like her glory days as editor-in-chief of Vogue Paris. She definitely defined an era and she is a total breath of fresh air that is much needed in the fashion and magazine world... can't wait to see what imagination and brilliance she has in store for her publication… the countdown is on!

Carine Roitfeld photographs © 2001 Condé Nast and Talk Magazine.