Karl Lagerfeld, Paul Smith, Victoria Beckham and three generations of the Missoni family had gathered in London to discuss luxury and heritage.
By Camilla Alfthan, Berlingske Tidende, November 2010.
Karl Lagerfeld, Paul Smith, Victoria Beckham and three generations of the Missoni family had gathered in London to discuss luxury and heritage.
By Camilla Alfthan, Berlingske Tidende, November 2010.
Some people create art which moves you by its depressive nature. One such is the film director, David Lynch who is also an avid painter and who just opened an exhibition in Gl. Strand in Copenhagen. The world is ugly, argues Lynch, and his works only reflect tiny fractions of all the ugliness in the world. In his cartoonish cult film, Blue Velvet, which was aired on the same day as the opening, Lynch even let his then-wife, Isabella Rosselini surrender to an asthmatic beast. Others have taken a different approach. In the world of fashion the images are generally an homage to beauty and estheticism. One example is the young, Australian artist, Michael Zavros who was recently commissioned to make portraits of iconic personalities such as Grace Kelly and Debbie Harry for the designer, Tommy Hilfiger. In an era of airbrushing the images are perhaps too perfect – though, Zavros’ work is probably what most people would prefer on their walls.
http://www.booooooom.com/2009/09/18/michael-zavros-painter/
For their 100th anniversary, Anna Zegna talks about sustainability and Italian craftmanship while calling upon National Geographic’s photographer, Mattias Klum.
By Camilla Alfthan, Plaza, September 2010
Diego Della Valle on his passion for shoes and leather.
By Camilla Alfthan, Plaza, July 2010.
Not just the horses are among the winners at Royal Ascot.
By Camilla Alfthan, Berlingske Tidende,June 2010.
..and other tales in leather by Simone Bendix – a Paris based actress who debuts with her own luxury label.
By Camilla Alfthan, Berlingske Tidende, October, 2010
Despite the wave of young talent iconic designers aged 70+ are still going strong.
By Camilla Alfthan, Berlingske Tidende, February 2010.
“I was always inspirered by the cosmos, circles and eternity. Circles have no corners, they go on forever,” said Cardin, who at almost 88 is also always on the go. When I met him the other day in his Marigny office, which he refers to as his laboratoire for the past 60 years, he’d just been in Moscow to receive a prize for his Palais de lumière – a 280 m glass sculpture situated in Boulogne-Billancourt – the original sketch was still laying on his cluttered desk. In July he opens the 10th edition of his cultural festival in Lacoste where he restored Marquis de Sade’s chateau and bought forty houses. That the futuristic Cardin style is forever a classic is evident in Jean-Pascal Hesse’s new book, Pierre Cardin – 60 ans de création, published by Flammarion. www.pierrecardin.com
When Greenland inspired Peter Jensen in his latest winter collection, the results were cool kamiks – and protests from local politicians.
By Camilla Alfthan, Berlingske Tidende, March 2009.