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

Apartment

Closet

Library

Julia Restoin-Roitfeld

Apartment

Closet

Library

Beauty Products

HOW TO BE A ROITFELD

Beauty Secrets

Style Tips

Recipes

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 

Entries in Carine Roitfeld (631)

vendredi
janv.072011

New Vogue Paris Editor-In-Chief: Emmanuelle Alt

Vogue Paris has just announced their new editor-in-chief — Emmanuelle Alt will be the next woman to lead the influential magazine, taking the place of our beloved Carine Roitfeld. She advances from her current role as fashion director for Vogue Paris. I cannot wait to see what Emmanuelle has planned for us... In her own words of acceptance she promises to keep developing the magazine, “It is a great honor for me, but also a great pleasure to become the editor of Vogue Paris that I know so well. In working with very talented teams I will try to develop the the incredible potential of Vogue Paris.” To learn more about Emmanuelle's fashion philosophy, read her interview with 20 Ans, the publication for which she and Carine worked prior to Vogue Paris.

Carine Roitfeld and Emmanuelle Alt photograph courtesy of mystylefest.wordpress.com
Emmanuelle Alt photograph © 2009 Condé Nast. All Rights Reserved.

vendredi
déc.242010

Merry Christmas Roitfeld Style

Thanks to WWD for thinking to check in with Julia Restoin-Roitfeld regarding her plans for the holidays. This will certainly be a memorable Christmas for the family and we are curious as to how they will spend their time together...

Roitfeld family traditions include a Christmas Eve cocktail hour with vodka and piroshkis in tribute to Carine's Russian heritage before moving on to dinner which typically includes "foie gras and my dad’s amazing turkey." Mademoiselle Restoin-Roitfeld plans to wear a brand new black lace dress from Givenchy especially for the occasion, "I love to play dress-up in the comfort of my own home," she confides.

Another special tradition for the Roitfelds is the opening of gifts on Christmas Eve. Each year Julia looks forward to exchanging presents with her family in Paris and she expresses her hopes for this year: "Something for the home is always one of my favorites. Right now I start to want to collect art or photo prints. Anything I can keep forever.” Maybe her very own Richard Hambleton is in order... Last year her brother Vladimir presented her with a lovely Chanel bag that had belonged to Catherine Deneuve, he needs to find something truly special to top that unique gift. Also, Carine mentioned buying a small work at the last Hambleton show, I assumed for her own collection but perhaps she intends it for someone else...

What will Julia be giving this year? Being a perfectionist like her mother, she has completed her Christmas shopping. Being a good French girl, she does not want to spoil the surprise. I wonder if she got maman her dream gift, a personal jet... Lucky for Julia, Carine says, "I prefer to give gifts than to receive," so no airplane required.

Prolonging the holidays, Julia and her beau, Robert Konjic, will travel to the Coqui Coqui resort in Tulum, Mexico at the end of January "to avoid the crowd and have the beach just for me and my boyfriend.” Sounds lovely! Joyeux Noël, Les Roitfelds ! Merry Christmas to all!

Richard Hambleton painting © 2010 Richard Hambleton. All Rights Reserved. Christmas cheer by Kellina de Boer.

mercredi
déc.222010

Carine Roitfeld's Vogue Paris Office

Have you ever wished for a glimpse inside the office of Carine Roitfeld at Vogue Paris? We simply must stop and take a look before our favorite editor-in-chief departs the sixth floor of 56 rue du Faubourg-Saint-Honoré forever. I have read that Carine frequently holds Vogue Paris meetings in her home, but when she must go to the office at least she has a lovely commute. From the Place des Invalides, past the Grand Palais and the Petit Palais, following the Seine to the Place de la Concorde, to one of the world's most fashionable streets, rue du Faubourg-Saint-Honoré, the location of the headquarters for Vogue Paris as well as many top fashion labels. As Carine says, “So you see, every day I see the most beautiful place in the world. It is not too bad.” The Vogue Paris offices are adjacent to the Hôtel de Crillon where La Roitfeld has also been known to take meetings if her own office is "too mess" as she says in her adorable way.

When you open the door to Carine's office, you are immediately struck by the starkness. White walls, modern décor, minimal possessions, it is remarkable to see that one can occupy a space for a decade and yet keep it so free from the extraneous. It is also extremely difficult to believe that this chic space is ever "too mess" for a meeting. Carine explains, “It is the same as in my home. I like clean, clean, clean, clean. It’s my new Zen attitude, you know? The less you have, the more you enjoy.” Elegantly furnished with a desk and a conference table by Le Corbusier, both topped in glass, a black leather sofa, black leather chairs by Mies van der Rohe, and chrome lighting fixtures by Tom Dixon, Carine keeps her office clear for professional reasons: "[It's] very minimalist because it's better for my mind. When everything is clean and empty it cools me down; if someone brings in pictures or articles to show me, I can see them better."

Only a few works of art grace the walls of Carine's office. As the Guardian hilariously remarked, most of these portray partially nude women with their hands in their knickers; when asked about this Carine shrugged politely. The first is Mario Sorrenti's shot from the Vogue Paris 2008 calendar with Natasha Poly fingerpainted by Sorrenti and Tom Pecheux as a pregnant bride complete with fœtus for the month of June (this remains my favorite VP calendar). In another enlarged and framed editorial shot, a model wears nothing but a Minnie Mouse mask and red boxer shorts. [If you have this image, please let me know.] Another of her brilliant editorial shots is pictured below, a close shot of female thighs framed by a gorgeous fur. Finally we see the iconic Karl Lagerfeld portrait, the indelible black and white image looming large against one wall. "Very Big Brother, no? The cult of personality... very Russian." laughs Carine. It just occurred to me, I think all of the art in Carine's office is either of her or by her, c'est fantastique !

The possessions that Carine permits on her desk and shelves are her Blackberry, her reading glasses, a pen, a cup of tea or water, vases of flowers (preferably white), two masks, a diamanté skull (“I love skulls,” La Roitfeld exclaims), an orange blossom candle in a glass holder, a gumball machine, a few books including a signed Stanley Kubrick edition, Maison Martin Margiela (to which she contributed an essay), Raphael Mazzucco Collected Art (for which she wrote the foreword), and a dictionary of Chinese characters in three volumes, along with her personal letters and photographs such as this one of her father, her brother, and her son, Vladimir.

Carine expressed her thoughts about her position at Vogue Paris frequently during interviews over the last decade, here are a few of the juicier bits:

"I think I am a terrible business woman."
"I never had an office before, never had a chair with a table... Have never been a boss."
“No Hugg boots in the office, they are hugly.”
"I like to have something every month that is — how you say? — not politically correct. A little bit at the limit. Sex, nudity, a bit rock'n'roll, a sense of humour. That is very Vogue Paris."
“My best quality is to be stylist. I never think about this career, this big job. I never wanted to be what I am today, and I will not die in the position.”
"I only start to work really hard when they [Julia and Vladimir] grow up. Now I work every day, Saturday, Sunday — but the children are big, they study far away."
"Daytimes I am editor-in-chief; after eight and at weekends I am a stylist. It is great! There is no one to criticize my work other than me."
"I am very happy here [at Vogue Paris] but I am sure something new is going to happen in the next year."
"I would not be able to work in this business, with all these amazing young girls, if I did not truly believe that beauty can come in many forms. You can be beautiful with big breasts, you can be beautiful in your 40s. If you do not have perfect ankles, still you can move your legs in a certain way and look very sexy."
"I am good at what I do here and I am not sure if you put me in that world [Vogue US] I would be as good. I think it is much easier to talk to 100,000 women than millions of women across America."
"They [computers] are not my specialty." [Again she shrugs. Must develop my shrug...]
"I do not think I will do this for my entire life, though. Because I love a challenge."
"If you struggle to pay bills, working on advertising you do not like, on magazines you do not like, at the end of the day is difficult to still like fashion. You know, is like when you squeeze a lemon... whereas I still have some juice."
"I do not know what I will do next but I cannot do the same for the next 10 years. I love to change. I have been here eight years; I think maybe 10 years is good."

Watch Carine at work in her office, analyzing spreads and making editorial decisions in this interview with La Blonde et moi.

La Blonde et moi: Carine Roitfeld partie 1
La Blonde et moi: Carine Roitfeld partie 2
La Blonde et moi: Carine Roitfeld partie 3

Carine Roitfeld's Vogue Paris office photographs courtesy of youtube.com and La Blonde et moi, © 2009 Cable News Network. Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. and © 2009 Guardian News and Media Limited. All Rights Reserved. Map courtesy of google.com.

vendredi
déc.172010

Carine Roitfeld Quits Vogue Paris

I have no real information but I will add details as available. I thought I should give us space to begin grieving and speculating so feel free to comment with your theories as to why Carine Roitfeld is leaving Vogue Paris. What could possibly be better?! Who could ever take her place?!

Carine Roitfeld photograph © Condé Nast and Hedi Slimane. All Rights Reserved. Vogue Paris cover image featuring Carine Roitfeld created by Kellina de Boer.

mercredi
déc.152010

Perfect Gifts For Roitfeld Fans: Eclectic

Hopefully you have managed to find a gift for each person on your list but just in case, here is a collection of eclectic choices based on favorites of the Roitfeld family. No matter how challenging the recipient may be, there is something here to please anyone from sports fans to gourmands to animal lovers. What is Carine Roitfeld hoping Santa will bring for her? I saved that one for last...

 

Chelsea Tickets

 

 Didier Drogba #11 Chelsea jersey

 

Diptyque Tubereuse candle

 

Adopt a white lion via West Midland Safari Park

 

Château Lynch-Bages

 

Orchids

 

Juicer

 

Carine Roitfeld Top

 

Restaurant gift certificates

Paris
Toraya
Au Coin des Gourmets
Café de Flore

New York
Bar Pitti
Il Buco
Indochine

Russian Tea Room
Soba-Ya

 

Penaudio speakers

 

Art by Richard Hambleton

 

Carine Roitfeld Finger Puppet

 

amfAR contribution

 

Jane Sofa by Gus

 

Exhale Pilates DVD

 

Kiki de Montparnasse

Finally, what does Carine Roitfeld want for Christmas? The ultimate luxury — a private jet!

Carine Roitfeld photograph courtesy of slamxhype.com. Julia Restoin-Roitfeld photographs © 2009 Todd Selby and courtesy of Jil Sander. Vladimir Restoin-Roitfeld photograph courtesy of nowness.com. Crystal Renn photograph © 2010 Condé Nast. Product images courtesy of Amazon, amfAR, Château Lynch-Bages, Chelsea Football Club, Kiki de Montparnasse, Penaudio, Richard Hambleton, rubbishmagshop.com, privateairplanes.com, and wideningcircle.blogspot.com. All Rights Reserved.