Saturday 24 November 2012

Best Fashion Photographers



Source (Google.com.pk)
Best Fashion Photographers Biography
Every person who aspires to lead a cultured life should start by educating themselves about the personalities and events that have shaped the luxury industry.

Here are 10 books that taught me a lot. They’re each well-written and give real insight on the history and current state of luxury from a business or artistic perspective.

 Madsen’s take on Gabrielle Chanel’s life has been criticized for failing to fully capture her French spirit, but as a non-obsessive Chanel fan (I love her, of course, but I don’t count myself among the members of her cult) I found it intriguing. Anyway that critique is to be expected from readers looking for a more laudatory tale.

In fact, Madsen handles Chanel well. An incorrigible liar who either re-constructed and conveniently forgot much of her childhood and early years, she would prove difficult for any biographer to profile in total accuracy. Madsen, biographer also of Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir, solidly parses her beginnings (brothel life as a child; boutique supported by lovers’ money; early alliances with powerful benefactors) and thoroughly studies the years she spent in considerable decline. Bottom line: This is a fair assessment of Chanel’s life with plenty of details about people, places and gossip to keep it interesting.

 This is a fantastic account of the scandalous history behind L’Oreal, the world’s largest beauty company controlled by the recently embattled billionaire Lilian Bettencourt. As you may recall, the modern cosmetics industry was significantly impacted by a Polish Jew and a Frenchman with Nazi ties: Helena Rubinstein and Eugene Schueller, respectively. This book tells how they each founded a skincare business, succeeded beyond their dreams and then fought to preserve their empires.

The interesting thing here is the difference in vision between Rubinstein and Schueller. While her business was founded on home remedies and her personal charisma, his developed after numerous scientific tests and lab work in his hair-dye shop. Schueller emerged victorious, of course; Brandon uses the conflict to question the standards of beauty and the role politics and business play in that arena. A good read.

Deluxe: How Luxury Lost Its Luster, Dana Thomas – The best narrative of the development of the luxury industry that I’ve read. Thomas was a style writer at The Washington Post, contributor for Newsweek in Europe and editor at Condé Nast Portfolio, and her journalistic credentials served her well. She expertly chronicles the founding years at Louis Vuitton and Hermès, the change in luxury in the 1990s and what it all means today. She also offers interesting tidbits like the fact that orange became Hermès’s signature color because it was the only color widely available during World War II.

Chapters are devoted to fragrance, wine, handbags and shoes, as well as to the dirty little secret about luxury brands manufacturing products in China. The main point is that most “luxury” goods are mass-market commodities produced, marketed and sold the same as any J.C. Penny special.
 
Best Fashion Photographers
Best Fashion Photographers
Best Fashion Photographers
Best Fashion Photographers
Best Fashion Photographers
Best Fashion Photographers
Best Fashion Photographers
Best Fashion Photographers
Best Fashion Photographers
Best Fashion Photographers
        Best Fashion Photographers         

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