I Want To Be A Roitfeld

Kellina de Boer
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Dara Block
STYLE EDITOR

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Jessica Eritou
Renee Hernandez
Bernie Rothschild

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Carine Roitfeld

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carine roitfeld: irreverent
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Marella Agnelli: The Last Swan
By Maria Agnelli

 

Fashionable Selby
By Todd Selby

 

O.Z. Diary
By Olivier Zahm 

mercredi
mars092011

Julia Restoin-Roitfeld Reads My Blog

Two of my loyal readers

I can finally die happily — Julia Restoin-Roitfeld confessed to The Telegraph that she reads I Want To Be A Roitfeld and considers it amazing and well made! Also funny, strange, and scary but I have been called worse... Julia, just so you know, Angelina Jolie bores me silly...

She's often photographed with [Robert] Konjic, but the most exhaustive catalogue of her life, and the lives of her mother and brother, can be found at the I Want To Be A Roitfeld website, an extraordinary labour of love, or perhaps obsession.

If you're after an itemised list of every cosmetic in her bathroom cabinet, for example, or a recipe for her favourite snack, you'll find them here. Roitfeld admits to browsing it.

'Of course, I'm curious! And it's quite amazing because it's really well made. But it's scary to see someone devote so much time. I mean, it's flattering but we're not celebrities like Angelina Jolie or anything. It's funny and strange.'

Read the full interview

Julia Restoin-Roitfeld and Carine Roitfeld photograph courtesy of wireimage.com

mardi
mars082011

Roitfeld Style Tip: Organize Your Closet

As the season changes, do you find yourself craving a whole new wardrobe? Kate Ringo Suzuki, our editor-at-large in New York, is here to tell you how to feel as if you have a fabulous new array of clothing and accessories without spending a dime — organize your closet! Many women that are noted for their style, including Julia Restoin-Roitfeld and Giovanna Battaglia, rejoice in organizing their closets regularly. You may be pleasantly surprised at the treasures you unearth…

Roitfeld Style Tip: Organize Your Closet
By Kate Ringo Suzuki 

Everyday Glamour Chicks, it is with pleasure that I present to you my first official guest post in my new role as New York editor-at-large for the ever chic and sophisticated blog, I Want To Be A Roitfeld. You may remember my first guest post for Ms. Kellina de Boer's cult site happened in April of 2010, Everyday Glamour Book Review: Classy by Derek Blasberg. But now I'm very official and important and my head is getting bigger by the minute. So here it goes...

Is your closet a dark abyss containing a jumble of shoes and old clothes languishing in disarray on the floor? Do you repeat the same outfits day in and day out even though you have an inkling that you just might have an impressive trove lurking somewhere in there? Do you leave the house with your hair still wet?? If so, then you may be in need of a little closet organization. Everyday Glamour Chicks, or E.G.C.s, love to get down and dirty and organize their closets. One such E.G.C. is the reigning face of Lancôme, Ms. Julia Restoin-Roitfeld. Julia is young, beautiful, and has fashion and style coursing through her veins. Her mother just happens to be the former editor-in-chief of Vogue Paris, muse to Tom Ford, and genius fashion stylist, Carine Roitfeld. Julia grew up with one fierce maman.

When Julia's hot beau, Robert Konjic (aka Mr. Perfect), wanted to do something special for her, he called her on their anniversary and said, "Look inside your wardrobe." According to Julia, "He'd hidden a present in it before he left — a stingray leather jewelry box." Imagine if your man tried hiding a present in your gloomy mess of a closet. You might never find it. Julia adds, "He was lucky I hadn't already found it, because I organize my wardrobe weekly." She organizes her closet WEEKLY, folks. See what I mean? E.G.C.s never whine about having to organize their closet. They organize with glee, with a glimmer in their eyes. They rub their hands together and whisper to themselves, "I can't wait to organize my closet!”

You may wonder what's so great about organizing your closet. Why bother? The main reason is to remind yourself of all the special pieces you already own. In short, organizing increases the chances that you actually wear what you have. Not just in your fantasy life, in which you are always seen at cool city hot spots or at cocktail parties, but in your real life, in which you spend your time eating Cheetos and Facebook flirting.

Vintage cabaret dress from GaneshaWhen organizing, it is important to keep only what you love. Julia does this. Take for example her description of one of her beloved dresses: "I bought this cabaret dress at Ganesha in Ibiza in the summer of 2006. I saw it in the window, tried it on and it fit me perfectly! It was meant to be. I've only worn it once and it was photographed a lot. It's one of those pieces I can wear at home, for my own pleasure, or I could just frame and hang on the wall." Julia shows us that if you love a piece of clothing but haven't worn it much, it's best to figure out how to wear it, save it for another time, or you could hang it on a wall. Forget organizing "experts" that say if you have not worn something in a year that you should give it away. Quelle horreur ! Those organizers have never owned a purple vintage Gaultier dress purchased for a song in an East Village boutique from a sales girl that was the spitting image of Betty Page. (Well, if Betty Page had a nose ring.)

Sometimes you don't need to hang your clothing on the wall. Sometimes all you need to do is Norma Kamali bathing suitfigure out how to wear that beloved piece, how to pull it together. Julia is an expert at making it work: "This is a Norma Kamali bathing suit I bought at Resurrection. I've never worn it. I almost did this winter in Paris, with tights and a belt but was too cold. I am waiting for that special summer day." Of course Lady Gaga would wear that outfit in the snow with a fierce pair of wooly Chanel mukluks, cold be damned! But Julia is more practical.

E.G.C.s are a pragmatic lot. They understand that when it comes to clothing and accessories, "The less you have the more you enjoy,” as Carine is fond of saying. YSL "Shakira" dressOrganizing your closet can be like shopping in a way — you are likely to discover pieces that you forgot. When you focus on how to work with what you already have, you start to get creative. Here is a glimpse into Julia's creative mind: "This Yves Saint Laurent dress is actually lingerie, which they don't make anymore now. I bought it at New York Vintage on 25th Street. I call it my Shakira dress!" I can relate to this because I have a Victoria's Secret dress that is actually a slip and it was on sale. I bought it on 34th Street. I call it my "Lucky Strike" dress. My point is that organizing helps you realize that it is best to slow down with the shopping for a moment and get creative with what you have.

What about the little lost orphan clothes that you love but simply cannot pull together into any semblance of an outfit? E.G.C.s remedy the Little Orphan Annie syndrome by shopping for fill-in pieces to make the wardrobe cohesive. AHA!! So this is when you can shop! But wait! You may have so many lost orphans that shopping for fill-in pieces would put you on the street. What to do?

Develop your own mini-collection. Pull your absolute favorite seven tops and four bottoms for the season. From there you can work on pulling together outfits from these favorites, accessories included. Out comes a pen and paper at this point, because you will be formulating a list of fill-in shopping. Go ahead, shop for the fill-ins, then put your mini-collection front and center in your closet. Do this twice a year, and you will come out a winner. And don't worry, I promise that you won't have to organize your closet weekly.

Julia Restoin-Roitfeld photographs courtesy of Fashion Spot, fashionair.com, © 2009 Todd Selby, and © 2010 Natalie Joos. All Rights Reserved.

dimanche
mars062011

Carine Roitfeld: La Panthère Ose

Milla Msa, editor-at-large in Paris, shares with us her views on the controversial editorial “La Panthère Ose” styled by Carine Roitfeld and shot by Tom Ford for the December 2010/January 2011 issue of Vogue Paris. In the twisted “La Panthère Ose,” Crystal Renn is made to look like a vain, rich cougar, fighting against age for all she is worth, surrounded by a cast of assorted young male models tending to her vanity and aiding in her illusion. Thank you, Milla, for your important message; I hope anyone considering cosmetic surgery will think twice due to your wisdom.

La Panthère Ose
By Milla Msa 

I made no secret of the fact that the December 2010/January 2011 issue of Vogue Paris, guest edited by Mr. Tom Ford himself, was by far the best issue of the year. Carine Roitfeld and Tom Ford are an editorial dream team and therefore a complete delight for the reader. One of their most bizarre editorials from the issue, “La Panthère Ose,” features Crystal Renn post-plastic surgery as styled by Madame Roitfeld and photographed by Monsieur Ford. Knowing how beautiful Crystal is only serves to amp up the shock of seeing her recovering from what I view as pointless operations.

Wearing emerald green Gianvito Rossi sandals and a Carinesque zebra print by Azzedine Alaïa, it is easy to be seduced by those perfectly toned legs and rich-chick jewels but not even a beautiful Lanvin silk scarf can distract from Crystal's bandaged visage as she recovers from a full face lift and nose job. I have seen the documentaries, I know the bandages!

As we progress through "La Panthère Ose," poor Crystal just gets worse and worse. Following the full face lift, we see the beautiful model recovering from a breast augmentation. There she is, gorgeous figure, with her boyfriend (and yes, I mean “boy”) washing her. One can only imagine her pain and her fear. Why do we put bodies through this? Yes, Vogue Paris is distracting us with high fashion pieces but the reality of post-surgery remains the same for the average person. The toy-boys, a well-placed can of Diet Coke, and the bling-bling lend credence to my theory that this woman is looking for something to make her feel complete and relevant: a younger man who despite the pick of younger women wants her, a skinny figure, because in her world that's the only way to be sexy, and most of all, luxury items to keep her feeling like a goddess, all whilst covered in bandages. Oh the irony...

Few images are as powerful and disturbing as Crystal lying back with the blood from her eyelid lift clearly visible and swollen lips as she holds her head and chest in pain, whilst her boy toys attend to her every whim, including ensuring she is wearing just enough Chanel N°5 — vital post-boob lift treatment, of course! Her eyes captivate me and her true fragility is exposed. I feel some connection to this image, some need to share it as I feel like her eyes are asking “How did it come to this?” — I wish I had the answer.

Wearing a silk and python Altuzarra dress and posing with a Tom Ford clad hunk, a scary looking, plump lipped, and feline eyed Crystal shows off her new look much to the horror of the viewer. Gone are the youngsters; she has her new face to make her feel good now. Her sunken cheeks and raised hairline only add to the severity of the look. Ladies, is this really attractive to you? I know people have plastic surgery but nothing pushes me farther from the surgeon's knife than images like this. Imagine what the real thing looks like.

Carine went to great lengths to produce a story so tragic it is almost comical. The relationship among wealth, style, self-worth, and cosmetic surgery is constantly questioned here; how can one be stylish when bandaged up like a mummy? The main question I feel the editorial poses, and one very relevant to all ages, is “How can we understand the beauty of Lanvin, Hermès, and Cartier, yet be blinded to our own natural beauty?” Honestly, I have no idea but I hope that long after my wrinkles become more apparent, I will always view elective plastic surgery as unnecessary and so very unglamorous.

[Editor's note: Julia Restoin-Roitfeld shares her mother's disdain for plastic surgery, recently telling Glamour, “Wrinkles can be beautiful. They’re part of who you are, your charm and your history. And I’m not for plastic surgery — I’d feel like I was cheating on myself."]

Vogue Paris editorial image © 2011 Condé Nast. All Rights Reserved.

vendredi
mars042011

Julia Restoin-Roitfeld At Nina Ricci

Special thanks to Pierre-Alban HF from The Crowd for sharing the lovely photographs he captured of Julia Restoin-Roitfeld outside of the Nina Ricci show yesterday at Paris Fashion Week. Visit Pierre at The Crowd for a glimpse of the runway at Nina Ricci, très incroyable.

Julia Restoin-Roitfeld photographs © 2011 Pierre-Alban HF. All Rights Reserved.

jeudi
mars032011

Carine Roitfeld: Irreverent

Woo hoo! Just a quick update on the forthcoming book about the life of Carine Roitfeld that Rizzoli is publishing, it is slated to release 4 October 2011. Now titled Carine Roitfeld: Irreverent, the book is edited by Olivier Zahm with Carine, Cathy Horyn, and Amy Larocca serving as authors. The stylish 300 page hardcover biography, or "scrapbook" as Zahm calls it, is designed by Buero New York and is available for pre-order on Amazon. I can't wait to possess a copy!

Carine Roitfeld: Irreverent cover image courtesy of Amazon.