As the fashion icon who was probably the least concerned about fashion, Iris Apfel became an “accidental influencer” at 90 years old. “If Coco Chanel told you that you can always take something off, Iris tells you that you can always put something else on.” Fine Art Print Paper: Fabriano 300 gsm Illustration made by the artist Xavi Julià
Iris Apfel is an American business woman, interior designer, fashion icon, and an outright badass. She takes maximalist style to soaring heights and we are slightly obsessed. We’re going to go ahead and say it: Iris Apfel is a goddess. With crazy glasses, jewelry that weighs more than she does, and an overall flee-market-slash-desert-bazaar-chic look, it’s easy to acknowledge that the woman is brimming with style inspiration. The 97-year-old has an attitude that is contagious and a style that will stand the test of time. Let’s enter the colorful, beautiful, chaotic world of all things Iris Apfel aka the queen of maximalism… eek, we are excited! Iris Apfel’s best-ever quotes will make you laugh, cry and want to rejig your wardrobe ASAP. Who What Wear Pinterest Style Caster Growing Bolder Who What Wear Iris Apfel’s fashion sense is about as eccentric as it gets. She is a master of layering clothing and jewelry, and mixing patterns and colors, knows firsthand the importance of accessorizing. From feathers, pom poms, large glasses, embroidery, bright colors, lots of chunky jewelry, to dramatic textures – she’s everything that we love and so much more. Here are a few of our favorite looks from her. Fashion Editorial How to Spend It In Style Style Caster How to Spend It Antiques and French-inspired decor fill style icon Iris Apfel’s exuberant three-bedroom Park Avenue apartment. It is everything that our maximalist hearts could dream of… Architectural Digest We could discuss Iris all day, err day – but for now we are going to use inspiration from her to start designing new creations here at Boho Luxe Home. Maybe our new motto, and everyone’s motto, should be – What would Iris do?! 🙂 We think that she would fully embrace our global pillows, art, fabric, wallpapers, and accessories. Us maximalists have to stick together! Tell us, are you digging Apfel’s style?
In an FN exclusive, style icon Iris Apfel talks mentoring students from the University of Texas at Austin, advice for the next generation.
You probably thought you'd heard enough when it comes to ingenious packing tips from models and fashion insiders.
[PT|ENG] 96-Year-Old Iris Apfel Is Cooler Than You’ll Ever Be!
In celebration of the style icon's new documentary, 'Iris,' we've rounded up the 93-year-old's most glamorous looks to date.
Businesswoman, interior designer, and American fashion icon, Iris Apfel is synonymous with extravagance and a good dose of style. With just turned 101, the American is known for wearing maximalist glasses, striking jewelry, and voluminous, colorful pieces. Get to know a little more about this fashionista!
Amazing accessories ahead.
Iris Apfel gehört zu den bekanntesten lebenden Stilikonen. Mit 97 Jahren unterzeichnete sie jetzt einen Vertrag mit IMG Models.
Tomorrow is the opening night of LE BON MARCHE's exhibition on the timeless Iris Apfel! Photographs courtesy of Daniela Federici.
The 95-year-old fashion icon’s mix of high-low styling makes her permanently modern
Iris Apfel is one of our favorite style icons and for good reason. Today we've rounded up some of our favorite items inspired by her!
More is more (and more).
The ever-fabulous Iris Apfel makes an appearance in Kate Spade’s spring/summer 2015 campaign. That’s all.
Like Kimoji for Advanced Style fans.
Alert: Style icon Iris Apfel is releasing a glassware collection you'll want to add to your dinnerware collection ASAP. Here's everything you need to know about 2019's most exciting collaboration.
I'm going to go ahead and say it: Iris Apfel is a demi-god. With Coke bottle glasses, jewelry that weighs more than she does, and an overall flee-market-slash-desert-bazaar-chic look, it's easy to acknowledge that the woman is brimming with style…
Fashion icon Iris Apfel is photographeed for Avenue Magazine on February 13, 2014 in New York City. PUBLISHED
Iris Apfel Editorial for Marie Claire China
Iris Apfel Iris Apfel (born August 29, 1921) is an American businesswoman, interior designer, and fashion icon.
Valerie says: Several months ago, Jessie Askenazi, a fashion blogger (check out Morning Passages) with an edgy eye who's young enough to be our daughter, asked us “Why do you think we hold back on celebrating our style as we age?" One of the answers I gave was that we have very few role models, given the fact that social independence, old age and widespread media coverage are all relatively new phenomena. If you think back historically on women trendsetters, most of them were young, wealthy and politically connected. Queen Elizabeth the First (1533 – 1603) is one of the few women I can name who continued to lead fashion into old age, but then, who would have dared start a competing trend – and who would have paid more than a minute’s attention if anyone had? Even now, although the editors of both Harper’s Bazaar and Vogue (left and right, respectively) are over fifty, they focus on fashion for the young, and are not arbiters of style for their own age group. Recently, Iris Afpel was the featured speaker at the Textile Study Group of New York, and we had the good fortune to hear her talk at length about her style, her work, her collections and her views on fashion, all while slides of a fabulous array of her many looks flashed by on a large screen. At 89, she's a wonderful role model for women of a certain age. If we repeated all the interesting things she said, it would take 30 minutes for you to read the blog. Since we know you’re busy people (plus, imagine how long it would take for us to write a 30 minute blog – we’re busy people too!), we’re just going to share our favorite nuggets with you, while studding the blog with fabulous photographs of her and her clothing. First, in case you didn’t already know, Iris Apfel’s wardrobe has just finished traveling the museum circuit (under several names, including, among others, Rara Avis and Rare Bird of Fashion), starting in 2005 with the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, and ending recently with the Peabody Essex Museum. The exhibition curator, Stephane Houy-Towner, acted as her interviewer at the Textile Study Group in a lively exchange that lasted more than an hour. (Jean says: Although it was the first time I had ever attended one of the group's presentations, I was pleasantly surprised to know about a half dozen of the members.) The idea for the exhibition began, Iris said, when Harold Koda asked to borrow some of her jewelry for a planned accessory show. But after the museum staff visited Iris’s home, Koda “rethought the concept”, Iris explained, and instead of showing several of her accessories, they showed eighty-two of her costumes (winnowed down from 300). (Jean says: Two summers ago, I organized a road trip to the Nassau County Museum to see the exhibition. I kept my eyes on the road but my ears on the conversation as I drove the Long Island Expressway to Roslyn Harbor and Valerie, Tziporah Salamon and our friend Bianca chatted up a storm. Although the clothes were in similar groupings to the show at the Metropolitan Museum, they looked very different in the more intimate Long Island mansion setting. I loved the fact that the show included not just the clothes themselves but also Iris' shoes, boots, handbags, gloves, luggage, hats, jewelry and eyewear. After the show, we went outside to a section of the formal gardens at the museum and had a champagne brunch (all the ingredients of which we brought ourselves) before heading home. Relax, dear readers -- as the designated driver, I was on my best behavior!) Iris still has the first piece of junk jewelry she bought. It cost sixty-five cents – quite a bit of money at the time - and she was 11 years old. (Jean says: I love Iris' down to earth attitude. What she calls "junk" jewelry was what was referred to in D.C. as "costume" jewelry. Iris acknowledged that what used to be reasonably priced at flea markets and tag sales is now ridiculously expensive. Proudly announcing that she is 89 years old and has been making her own wardrobe decisions since childhood, she said she'd never be able to afford to assemble her collection if she started today.) Iris has no interest in what she calls “real jewelry”, citing Harry Winston as an example. “I love ethnic jewelry”, she said. “It knocks me out.” One of the photos in her slide show consisted of several silver Tibetan prayer wheels studded with stones, which she wore as bracelets. Two other photos showed jewelry worn by cows and horses in India, both of which Iris has worn herself. (Jean says: She does have the tiniest wrists. The inner circumference of those prayer wheels couldn't have been more than 6" -- compared to about 8" for the average bakelite bracelet. They were also wide and thick -- much wider around than bagels, so they must have been quite a wristful for the diminutive Ms. Apfel!) From the 1950s to the 1990s, Iris and her husband Carl owned and ran a textile business, Old World Weavers, which bought and commissioned textiles from mills worldwide using ages-old techniques. Business often took them to London and Paris. At the time, she explained, Christian missionaries who had lived in China and left after the 1913 revolution were selling the curiosities acquired during their service, and that was how they came onto the European market. Iris told any number of wonderful anecdotes. Old World Weavers, she said, has “worked in the White House for at least nine presidents.” Contrary to popular belief, Jackie Kennedy “did not do the White House. She signed all the papers, but everything had to be historically correct.” As Iris pointed out, that power in the hands of whoever was in the White House at the time would have been a dangerous thing. “Can you imagine if Mamie Eisenhower…?” she trailed off. (Jean says: Iris was right that the Fine Arts Commission actually oversees White House furnishings, and made a point of the fact that Jackie's style was more French Imperial than American Colonial. In Mamie Eisenhower's defense, I would just like to point out that Mamie was a product of her times and was The Fifties personified. Since Elizabeth Arden was her good friend and provided her with wardrobe advice and hair cuts at her Red Door Salon, Ms. Arden should bear some of the blame for perpetuating Mamie's short-bangs hairdo and Harriet Nelson shirtwaist dresses.) Of the old textile techniques, disappearing at an alarming rate in modern times, Iris said “We squandered a fortune because we didn’t want the old ways to go.” She mentioned paying for mills to take on apprentices so old techniques could be passed down. But most people would leave after a few months, she said. One left for a job with better hours. One mill owner, she said “...in a fit of pique ... burned his own mill down.” Iris is so immediately identified with her large round glasses that at Notorious and Notable exhibit currently on view at the Museum of the City of New York and in the Rara Avis show, the mannequins wearing her dresses are also wearing pairs of her own eyeglasses or replicas. “I used to wear enormous hats”, she said. “It always cost me more to have the box made than the hat.” She explained that she doesn’t wear hats anymore because her glasses get in the way. One imagines Iris has met everybody, and has all sorts of stories that it would be indiscreet to tell, but she did mention that one of her clients was Mrs. Marjorie Merriwether Post. Mrs. Post “had bad feet” because when she was a child she went around in all kinds of weather selling what would soon become Post cereal with her father, and had suffered frostbite. As an adult, Mrs. Post was married to the Ambassador to Russia, and she and her husband “went through Russia with a vacuum cleaner.” (Jean says: Now we know how Mrs. Post furnished Mar-a-Lago and Hillwood! Iris told a funny anecdote about the time that her husband had provided floor-to-ceiling draperies for one of Mrs. Post's ballrooms. Although she had numerous mansions, Mrs. Post never forgot her humble roots and selling Postum door-to-door. She called Mr. Apfel to say how beautiful the drapes were but, as she had actually climbed a tall ladder to count the tassels on each of the drapes, she wanted to know how many tassels there should be on each. Mr. Apfel's response was priceless: "Mrs. Post, I had a bowl of your company's cereal this morning. Can you tell me how many raisins were in the bowl?" ) Another client was Roberta di Camerino. Old World Weavers supplied material for an iconic di Camerino handbag. On one of her trips to Venice, Iris arrived at her hotel room only to find it “filled with flowers – it looked like they’d laid out some Mafioso”. It turned out the flowers were from Ms. di Camerino, in thanks for Old World Weavers’ role in the success of the bag. At some of the Rara Avis venues, Iris put out pieces from her own jewelry collection for sale. So far she’s “sold well over a thousand pieces ... all things I bought to wear.” (Jean says: The Nassau County Museum's gift shop did have a selection of iris' bracelets, pendants and necklaces for sale, with the proceeds to benefit the museum. Bravo! Valerie adds: Wish we'd gotten there WEEKS earlier!) When asked during the Q&A period whether she had ever made a system for finding her clothes, or whether one had arisen as a byproduct of the exhibition, she said no. Lacking a system, she said, things disappeared, only to turn up unexpectedly at some later time. Not being able to find what she wants doesn’t bother her, though, because finding something else inspires her to make different choices. Now, however, Pratt interns are in the process of archiving her collection. (Jean says: I'm going to use the fact that I don't have archivists as my excuse the next time I can't locate something I'd like to wear.) On collecting, Iris says: “You can’t stop. It’s a terrible disease.” (Jean says: It was interesting that Mr. Houy-Towner corrected Iris and said she wan't a collector but rather was a consumer, since everything she bought, she wore. Iris agreed and shared the story of visiting an acquaintance who collected designer clothes but never wore them because it would diminish their value.) On her own personal style: “I like architectural clothes that I can embellish.” (Jean says: Iris' motto ought to be "More is more." In response to a question from the audience about what she was wearing, Iris pulled up the sleeve of her grey striped jacket to reveal stacks of large resin bangle bracelets. She wore a necklace with a silver round Chinese Minority bauble and carried a walking stick that she hooked over the arm of her arm chair during her talk. Iris tends to favor large pieces of jewelry and wears her necklaces and chains in layers. She did mention that she has one necklace that is so heavy, she wears it while standing for only short periods of time at events before she has to sit down. She called it the "six minute necklace". She freely acknowledges that her jewelry can be noisy when different pieces clang together and told the story of a classmate once remarking that he used to look for her but then just listened for her instead.) Iris also said she periodically gives away or sells things she knows she will no longer wear. When asked what she got rid of, she mentioned certain staple items that she replaced regularly, and other clothes that she had lost interest in. (Jean says: Iris donates her clothing to charitable thrift shops. I was tempted to raise my hand and ask "Which ones and during what months of the year?" but stifled the impulse.) Like so many people, Iris has clothes that she doesn’t wear but can't bear to give away either. Of those, she said “They can have them when I’m dead.” * * * * * * * * * * Want more? Click here if you’d like to read a transcript of a conversation between Iris and Lisa Kosan, Editorial Director of the Peabody Essex Museum. And click here for a five minute video on Iris, also put together by the Peabody Essex Museum.
There is a bestseller on the waves. Marie Kondo’s book, The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up: The Japanese Art of Decluttering and Organising.
Style icon Iris Apfel, 92, sat down to talk street style, design, and fashion with StyleCaster!
Elas já passaram dos 50, 60, 70, 80 e até dos 90 anos de idade. Têm estilo próprio, discurso engajado e atitude de fazer inveja a muita menininha. Conheça as digital influencers da terceira idade que têm conquistado marcas de luxo e milhares de followers
Elle est partout : dans la publicité pour la DS3 de Citoën, dans Le Monde daté d'aujourd'hui à propos d'un documentaire d'Albert Maysles diffusé sur NETFLIX ... et en invitée dhonneur du Bon Marché qui lui consacre une exposition au rez-de-Chaussée...
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The original maximalist is being celebrated with a collection that’s as loud as you’d expect.
Style icon Iris Apfel, 92, sat down to talk street style, design, and fashion with StyleCaster!