Humans who make beautiful things are not always beautiful people, at least not in the way we’d like them to be, writes our film critic Stephanie Zacharek. But if Karl Lagerfeld, who died on Feb. 19 at 85, wasn’t always kind—he was well known for his wicked, sometimes cruel quips—he was so exquisitely distinctive, as a personality and as a designer, that ignoring him was impossible. The young #Lagerfeld began his career as an assistant to couturier Pierre Balmain, in 1955, eventually moving on to design for Jean Patou, @chloe and @fendi, where he served as creative director until his death. But the designer’s longest and most famous association is with the house of @chanelofficial, which he joined in 1983. Coco Chanel had revolutionized #fashion by introducing easy-fitting but impeccably constructed garments that freed #women from constriction, but by the 1970s, even her tastefully classic shapes had become stale. Lagerfeld swooped in like wind through an open window. His clothes were fresh and invigorating, season after season, even as they maintained proper respect for his forebear: he’d pair her trademark supple tweeds with biker jackets, or fashion her staid bouclé into swingy ponchos, fusing tradition with glamorous modernity. Lagerfeld’s signature look—stiff Victorian shirt collar, dark glasses, steel silver ponytail—was itself an extreme, dazzling work of invention. But where’s the line between self-caricature and irreproducible originality? Lagerfeld, photographed in Paris in 2009, walked it like a dancer. His steps can never be ­duplicated. Read more about how Lagerfeld redefined modern fashion at the link in bio. Photograph by @sebastienmicke—@parismatch_magazine/Contour by @gettyimages

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Humans who make beautiful things are not always beautiful people, at least not in the way we’d like them to be, writes our film critic Stephanie Zacharek. But if Karl Lagerfeld, who died on Feb. 19 at 85, wasn’t always kind—he was well known for his wicked, sometimes cruel quips—he was so exquisitely distinctive, as a personality and as a designer, that ignoring him was impossible. The young #Lagerfeld began his career as an assistant to couturier Pierre Balmain, in 1955, eventually moving on to design for Jean Patou, @Chloé and @Fendi, where he served as creative director until his death. But the designer’s longest and most famous association is with the house of @シャネル, which he joined in 1983. Coco Chanel had revolutionized #fashion by introducing easy-fitting but impeccably constructed garments that freed #women from constriction, but by the 1970s, even her tastefully classic shapes had become stale. Lagerfeld swooped in like wind through an open window. His clothes were fresh and invigorating, season after season, even as they maintained proper respect for his forebear: he’d pair her trademark supple tweeds with biker jackets, or fashion her staid bouclé into swingy ponchos, fusing tradition with glamorous modernity. Lagerfeld’s signature look—stiff Victorian shirt collar, dark glasses, steel silver ponytail—was itself an extreme, dazzling work of invention. But where’s the line between self-caricature and irreproducible originality? Lagerfeld, photographed in Paris in 2009, walked it like a dancer. His steps can never be ­duplicated. Read more about how Lagerfeld redefined modern fashion at the link in bio. Photograph by @sebastienmicke@parismatch_magazine/Contour by @gettyimages


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