Robert Duffy

Michael Kors

Are the Current Pressures of the Fashion Industry Causing Designers to Crash? Karl Lagerfeld, Marc Jacobs, and More Speak

>> Between Alexander McQueen committing suicide last year, John Galliano's drunken, anti-Semitic outburst, and Christophe Decarnin being sidelined for depression treatments, many are starting to wonder if the fashion industry and its current pressures — particularly the demand for more and more collections, released faster and faster — are to blame for designers spinning out of control.

>> Between Alexander McQueen committing suicide last year, John Galliano's drunken, anti-Semitic outburst, and Christophe Decarnin being sidelined for depression treatments, many are starting to wonder if the fashion industry and its current pressures — particularly the demand for more and more collections, released faster and faster — are to blame for designers spinning out of control. Karl Lagerfeld, Michael Kors, and more address the issue:

Karl Lagerfeld: “I see designing, running a company, like a high-level athletic activity. I don’t want to hear anything about the fragility or any of those things. If an athlete is too fragile to run, he cannot run. And this is exactly the same. You don’t accept this kind of business if you’re too much of an artist. I believe in discipline, so I’m not the right person to cry about weakness and things like this, but maybe I’m not human.”

Marc Jacobs: “You don’t think bank tellers have problems? You don’t think people in the middle of the suburbs have problems? Blaming is such a complete waste. I mean, it’s so pointless. To say, you know, my mother was absent and therefore I ran amok, it’s ridiculous. It’s a self-destructive nature, it’s a mental, physical and a kind of spiritual malady . . . people who are happy and healthy and spiritually well don’t do things to hurt themselves.”

Yves Saint Laurent's longtime business partner Pierre Berge: “I have a lot more sympathy for people who have to take the train to work every day. What a load of nonsense! No, no, no. Designers are artisans who are extremely privileged to have a poetic profession. They are not artists. We have to stop saying that they are.”

Marc Jacobs's longtime business partner Robert Duffy: “You cannot blame the industry. The majority of actors are not drug addicts, the majority of designers are not drug addicts.”

Theory founder Andrew Rosen: “I don’t see fashion as an industry being ahead of the world in terms of this issue. It’s a devastating and unfortunate condition that happens in every walk of life. It doesn’t make it better or OK, it’s a devastating illness to all those around it. Drug addiction, and addiction in general, is unfortunately part of society today. Maybe because we’re so close to our industry, we feel it more. Whenever it happens, it’s horrible.”

Michael Kors: "No question . . . I mean, I forget what season I’m in sometimes. I think every designer in today’s world, I don’t care whether you’re a designer who makes clothes that are phantasmagorical or very pragmatic, you have to figure out something that can ground you and bring you back. Whatever it is, if you go to the gym too much or you travel too much, you’ve got to have time to escape. I always tell everyone the crazy conversation I’ve had forever with actors, if they do two films in a row, and they’ve lived these characters and they’re on the set away from their friends and family, but then they take a year off. What are designers supposed to say? 'I’m tired. I’m not doing fall. Wear last year’s clothes, and maybe get some new nail polish.' It’s endless."

Photographer Mert Alas: “I’m the kind of person that I live under pressure, but I enjoy the pressure, so it very much relates to your own personality. Of course we’re all under pressure. The bus driver is under pressure. But, you know, it’s how you come out of it. If you can make good fun with it, pressure can be enjoyable.”

New York Times's Cathy Horyn: "For designers already at big houses, the pressures must reach absurd levels . . . Many people in professional and creative fields are under intense pressure, but for designers that pressure is manifested on the runway. The problem goes beyond having to produce multiple collections a year; it’s the nearly brutalizing feeling that something new and relevant must be communicated each season."

Co-President of PR firm KCD Ed Filipowski: “As a publicist, I have also taken on many times the role of ‘fashion therapist’ to my clients. Globalization, digitalization — the speed and scope of our work — has added a tremendous amount of pressure not only to the creative field but everyone in this industry. I would venture to say we are all doing at least twice as much work twice as fast as we were five years ago.”

Marc Jacobs

Robert Duffy Thinks of Marc Jacobs as the "Crazy Mother" in the MJ Family

>> Robert Duffy, Marc Jacobs's business partner, who spoke to Vogue UK this week, says he can't imagine a world in which he didn't work with Jacobs: "We have always worked together, for 27 years, and I don't think we'll ever go our separate ways.

>> Robert Duffy, Marc Jacobs's business partner, who spoke to Vogue UK this week, says he can't imagine a world in which he didn't work with Jacobs: "We have always worked together, for 27 years, and I don't think we'll ever go our separate ways. We've both done projects separately, of course, when we've been really broke or when we've been fired, but we just know each other so well now."

That longstanding relationship has translated into the Jacobs business as a whole. "We have a very low staff turnover," Duffy explains. "Some people have been here for 25 years . . . We're definitely like a family. I'm the dad and Marc is the crazy mother! It's like 'How is she today?', 'How are her mood swings?'!"

Duffy also revealed his strategy for getting the new Marc Jacobs store locations he really wants: "Partly it happens because I have a very small budget to find new sites, but it means there is an emotional thing behind every location. I think that's the best way to find a new store, I fall in love with the building and then drive the person that has it crazy until we get the lease! That way you already have a vision for the store and you put all your energy in to it. In LA, I wanted this store which was a carpet shop, on the intersection between Melrose Place and Melrose Avenue, and I visited the guy who owned it constantly until — five years later — we finally got it. Then, I found a store I loved on Mount Street in London — which I loved because it was on a corner, with lots of windows, but also because I always stay at the Connaught so I love the street — and went in to see the guy who owned it; it was a carpet shop too. After a while he said, you just bought a store from my brother in LA! It was his brother I'd been driving crazy, so he said 'Ok, you can have it!'"

Link Time

Link Time!!!

Louis Vuitton

Marc Jacobs Is In Contract Renegotiations with Louis Vuitton; Bernard Arnault Has Veto Power on John Galliano's Dior Designs

>> Robert Duffy and Marc Jacobs are in the midst of negotiating the renewal of their respective contracts at Louis Vuitton, Duffy confirms.

>> Robert Duffy and Marc Jacobs are in the midst of negotiating the renewal of their respective contracts at Louis Vuitton, Duffy confirms. But he doesn't expect there to be any problems: “It’s just starting but, I mean, we both want to stay. I don’t think that’s any secret. When two people want to renew their vows, they do it usually.”

It sounds like the feeling is mutual from Louis Vuitton head Bernard Arnault. "I could have asked many other talented designers to do Dior, but it would not have been the same," Arnault told Tatler Asia. "Take Marc Jacobs, he has been a fantastic success at Vuitton, and he has a proximity to the Vuitton spirit, but I don't think it would have been a success with Jacobs at Dior and the other way around, if I had asked John [Galliano] to do Vuitton, it would not have worked. An essential ingredient in the success of the brand today is the real proximity of Galliano to the talent of Christian Dior." Arnault and Galliano meet at the LVMH offices in Paris to discuss each of Galliano's Dior collections before it is shown. "We meet in this room," explains Arnault. "I say, 'John, I think we should do something else. What you have done is too extravagant.' For Dior it's all about the details and John listens."

Marc Jacobs

Full-Figured and Fab: The Most Noteworthy Plus-Size Posts From 2010

When it comes to plus-size fashion, 2010 was a pretty groundbreaking year.

When it comes to plus-size fashion, 2010 was a pretty groundbreaking year. Between the rise of curvaceous model — and all-around babe — Crystal Renn and the emergence of both chain retailers and major designers adding plus sizes to their collections, the fashion industry took great strides in accepting women of all sizes. Here are the noteworthy plus-size features from the past 12 months:

Marc Jacobs

Marc Jacobs Launches Illustrated Ecommerce Site

>> Marc Jacobs finally launched an ecommerce site today, featuring a trifecta of playful illustrations (of actual sales people dressed in Marc Jacobs clothes — their outfits and identities will change over time), runway videos, and photography.

>> Marc Jacobs finally launched an ecommerce site today, featuring a trifecta of playful illustrations (of actual sales people dressed in Marc Jacobs clothes — their outfits and identities will change over time), runway videos, and photography. "It's going back to the roots of the Marc Jacobs brand, which is to be fun, entertaining, engaging and cool," said James Gardner, founder and CEO of Createthe Group, the online design firm that worked with Jacobs on the new site. Currently, only a small curated selection — chosen by Jacobs and his business partner Robert Duffy — covering both the Marc Jacobs and Marc by Marc Jacobs brands, is available for purchase — at least for now.

Marc Jacobs

>> Marc Jacobs Moving Beyond Just Clothing Stores?

>> Marc Jacobs Moving Beyond Just Clothing Stores? Also: His Spring 2011 Show Is Not Front Row-Only —Marc Jacobs is slowly expanding out of clothing and accessories-only stores: he just opened his Bookmarc bookstore in Manhattan, and now, according to his business partner Robert Duffy, they're looking around "uptown" New York City for a Marc Jacobs Cafe location. The first Marc Jacobs Cafe was opened earlier this year as part of the Milan Marc by Marc Jacobs, but currently there are no Marc Jacobs stores in uptown Manhattan, so the upcoming location could be standalone. Speaking of Marc, it sounds like the egalitarian "everyone's a front rower" approach he took to the last two seasons' shows is short-lived — seating assignments are coming in more than one row for this season. Does that mean that celebrities are allowed back, too? [Racked, @MeenalMistry]

Marc Jacobs

Marc Jacobs On What Hurts His Feelings, What's Currently Turning His Gears

>> Marc Jacobs and his longtime business partner Robert Duffy have a unique relationship, which while the two chat in the September 2010 issue of Interview, Jacobs describes as thus: "I think anything that affects you [Duffy] affects me.

>> Marc Jacobs and his longtime business partner Robert Duffy have a unique relationship, which while the two chat in the September 2010 issue of Interview, Jacobs describes as thus: "I think anything that affects you [Duffy] affects me. I am Marc Jacobs by birth, but we are Marc Jacobs by the company we built."

Jacobs also speaks to what has worked his mind recently — perhaps there's some potential Spring 2011 inspiration in there? "I don't know much about classical music, but I've been enjoying listening to it lately. I find it very calming and with my energy not being as high as it often is, I guess I've just been enjoying the beauty of different composers. In terms of visuals, contemporary art stimulates me the most, although in working on the new [West Village] house, I've been antique shopping, looking at rugs and fabrics for interiors, and so I've been looking at a lot of interior magazines. I find gorgeous rooms to be extremely arousing at the moment."

On all the attention: "If we built a pile of crap then nobody would care what I ate for lunch." »

Fashion Flash

Marc Jacobs to Add Plus Sizes to His Label?

Marc Jacobs CEO Robert Duffy recently took to his company Twitter account to announce the possibility of adding a size 18 to the label — the largest size right now is a 16.

Marc Jacobs CEO Robert Duffy recently took to his company Twitter account to announce the possibility of adding a size 18 to the label — the largest size right now is a 16. "I'm a big guy 6'4" 210 lbs. [It's] not easy for me to find clothes. Of course I can have them made. I know how everyone feels. I try to diet but . . . We gotta do larger sizes . . . As soon as I get back to NY. I'm on it! It will take me about a year. But stay with us. Problem solving is a big part of our job," he tweeted. This is definitely a positive proclamation! What do you make of it — would you wear more Marc Jacobs if it came in plus sizes?

Marc Jacobs

>> Marc Jacobs E-Commerce Launching Sept.

>> Marc Jacobs E-Commerce Launching Sept. 15 —September 15 now not only marks Marc Jacobs's Spring 2011 show date, but a barrage of launches for the brand. Jacobs is using the Fashion Week buildup as an opportunity to open his new Manhattan book store, Bookmarc, and debut his e-commerce site for US customers — both on the same day as his show. No word on what the e-commerce offerings will encompass, but Robert Duffy hinted to the New York Times last month that the site will have different items than can be found on other retailers that sell Jacobs's wares online. [Thread NY]