Showing posts with label Jil Sander. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jil Sander. Show all posts

Wednesday, 27 November 2013

Happy Birthday Jil Sander!




 
Heidemarie Jiline 'Jil' Sander  
(born 27 November 1943)  
minimalist German fashion designer and the founder of the Jil Sander fashion house. 
She was listed as one of the fifty best-dressed over 50s by the Guardian in March 2013. 




Jil Sander’s journey has been one with many ups and downs, as well as ins and outs. 
She founded her company in 1968 and went on to become a prominent minimalist in the 1990s, 
alongside Helmut Lang and Prada.

In 1999, Prada bought a 75 per cent stake in the company, 
but Sander left just six months later due to business conflicts with Prada CEO Patrizio Bertelli.

She made a short-lived comeback in 2003, 
but left again the following year because Bertelli wanted to move the brand’s focus 
from clothing to accessories, against Sander’s wishes.

Raf Simons was hired in 2005 and left in 2012, 
when it was announced that Jil Sander herself would be returning.

Last month it was confirmed that she’d be leaving for the third time. 
The brand’s fall-winter 2014 collection will be designed by an in-house design team 
and presented at Milan Fashion Week early next year.

***
*

So what now? 

 Jil Sander celebrates her 70th birthday today.

 It’s not unusual for a designer of that age to be active in the fashion industry 
(Karl? Giorgio? Oscar?) 
but maybe the ideas don’t come as easily as they used to. 
She’s probably too jaded to get the same rush from the fashion industry, 
which isn’t exactly surprising for someone who has done so much, 
seen it all and done it all.



HAPPY  BIRTHDAY
to the
QUEEN  OF  LESS

Jil Sander

***
*

see also my posts about Jil


and


*
*

Text sourcehere


Friday, 21 January 2011

Fashion - Jil Sander - part 2

A minimalist German fashion designer


classic - elegant - and....timeless




Success and expansion

Since 1978, Jil Sander marketed her first perfume
prominently featuring her countenance.



The owner of Lancaster Cosmetics allowed her financially
to run ads in glamorous magazines on a large scale for her fashion.
The fact that her creations were coordinates
which could all be easily combined with each other
became a popular characteristic.





Sander created the so-called onion look
layering various pieces of clothing in one outfit.


Later, licenses would be given for..
...eyewear and...

...leather accessory lines.


*


In the 1980s, Sander's collections were first shown in Milan
to tackle the international markets more efficiently.
As a result, sales were steadily increasing.



*


 *


*




*



*




*




*


More fragrances were added to the cosmetics line.
The label's luxurious minimalism was a hit in the later 1990's.

***


*


*


*


****

Jil Sander AG went public in 1989 and was sold to shareholders 
on the Frankfurt stock exchange among the 
first fashion houses to venture on such a step.
Sander used the new capital to expand in Asia and North America.

Her success overseas resulted in expensively furnished flagship stores
in Tokyo, Hong Kong, and Taipei among a big number of others.
Sander personally overlooked the design of her stores and strict guidelines
were implemented for the sales staff on how to behave 
and where to stand in the boutiques.

At the Paris store, opened in 1993, the Jil Sander collections
could be shown on more than 9,000 square feet and four floors.
The space at 52 Avenue Montaigne in Paris
used to be French fashion designer Madeleine Vionnet's atelier and showroom,
a designer whose work has influenced Sander's.


In 1998 Jil Sander and German sportswear house Puma 
jointly launched a successful sneakers collection.

***


***

New ownership

Jil Sander's success continued into the mid-1990s.
Her company survived the economic crisis in Asia.
She found success with a newly launched men's collection that had been
postponed several times before in 1997 and was described
as "precision-cut with an emphasis upon light fabrics".
A desire with Sander to concentrate more on the creative design
rather than the business, resulted in much praise and acclaim from the critics.
Nevertheless, Jil needed a financially strong partner realizing
that her company was steadily growing.
Jil Sander AG was no longer a small privately owned business.

*

In 1999 Prada Group bought a 75 % share in her company,
Sander, remained creative designer and became chairwoman
in the new joint venture.
Six months later, in January 2000, 
Sander unexpectedly left after confrontations
with Prada CEO Patrizio Bertelli, a quick-tempered Italian businessman.

An uncompromising perfectionist, Jil had refused to use cheaper fabrics
and to bring the traditionally slim fits in line with standard sizes,
as demanded by Bertelli in the context of drastic cost cuts
and a more affordable mainstream approach.
Bertelli also insisted on giving up the contributary workshops in Germany
in favor of the shops in Italy owned by Prada.

Thus, for the first time in many years, Jil was able 
to indulge in extensive travelling, sailing, going to the opera
and taking care of her gardens after her resignation but the fashion house floundered both creatively and financially without Jil Sander.

*

Comeback and abandonment


Jil Sander returned to the company as head designer
and partner in a surprise decision in May 2003,
after her non compete clause had expired.
Officially, Bertelli "approached Ms. Sander and began negotiating a truce"
Ironically, Bertelli had, with regard to Sander's departure in 2000,
boldly stated before:
"A brand as strong as Jil Sander...
...doesn't need to rely on the name of a designer"


Sander's return was celebrated unanimously by the international press.
Sander's designs, bearing the JIL SANDER signature 
with a more feminine look, were a hit with both customers and critics.
Designing two collections which were both showcased in Milan,
Sander altered Prada-appointed designer 
Milan Vukmirovic's existing sketches for the men's collection,
redesigned some of the boutiques and audited the books herself.







However, in November 2004,
Jil Sander terminated cooperation with Prada for good and
resigned from her post again after insurmountable differences with Mr. Bertelli.
Prada announced in an official statement that
"the decision by Patrizio Bertelli...
and Ms. Sander to end her involvement in the company was amicable."

Jil Sander subsequently withdrew from the fashion world.

On March 17, 2009
Sander announced the creation of her own fashion consultancy.
The new company's first client was Fast Retailing of Japan
with its Uniqlo label for whom Jil Sander is overseeing
the design of womenswear and menswear collections called +J.





 
Jil Sander was awarded
the 'Bundesverdienstkreuz' by the Federal Republic of Germany
for her achievements in the fashion industry.

*

Remarks: Pictures scanned from the 'Fashion folders' 
FALL/WINTER and SPRING COLLECTIONS 1987/1988

*


Jil Sander's "Working Villa" in Hamburg, near the Alster lake
 

Tables from Flamant
Chairs from the Danish designer Hans Wegner, 1960s

 
Staircase designed by the New Yorker designer Michael Gabellini

Pictures from ARCHITECTURAL DIGEST, Oktober 2010 (German edition)
photographed by Jil Sander herself 

Thursday, 20 January 2011

Fashion - Jil Sander

A minimalist German fashion designer



classic - elegant - and....timeless


My favorite Fashion Designer
- since she started with her shop in Hamburg 
just around the corner from where I lived -
is certainly....


***


Heidemarie Jiline 'Jil' Sander, born in Wesselburen, Schleswig-Holstein,
grew up with her mother and later studied textile design in Krefeld
from where she graduated as a textile engineer in 1963.
Having spent two years as an exchange student
at University of California at Los Angeles,
she worked as a fashion editor at German women's magazine Petra
before opening her first boutique in Hamburg 1967, being 24 years old.

She started out selling fashion designed by Thierry Mugler and Sonia Rykiel
and also a few of her own designs.
And, with few ups and downs, she founded her eponymous fashion house,
Jil Sander GmbH in 1968.

***
 Showing her collection in Paris in 1975 proved a complete failure, though.
In the late 1970s and early 1980s,
when the fashion world was dominated by lavish,
colorful and glitzy Dynasty-style designs by the likes of
Claude Montana with his broad-shouldered leather look,
Jil Sander's minimalist collections,
with a focus on fabric quality came close to a revolution in the fashion world
and were not accepted next to the Parisian catwalks.
Here style only started gaining attention in the 1990s.

***

During the 1980s
we customers were sent twice a year a 'Fashion Folder'
to give us a first impression of the forthcoming collection.


Luckily I kept a few
from where I scanned some pictures to share.....



Jil Sander's trademark look, a contemporary, somewhat odd, New Look
-originally intended for women conquering executive positions in the 1980s-
was that of a precisely cut pantsuit...


..a slim blouse..




...and a form-fitting coat..


...made of luxurious fabrics...



...in beige...



..in plain grey...



...in blue...


...in black or white.

***

Jil Sander enjoyed almost cult-like followings for her fashions
that could all be easily coordinated
and have always ranged in the top price segment.


For her single-minded focus on understated elegance..




...high-end materials...





...and refined tailoring,






Jil Sander has been described as the...




...Cashmere-Queen...



...the Queen of Less...




...Master of Minimalism


***



***



Remark:  All pictures from the FALL/WINTER COLLECTIONS 1987 and 1988

...to be continued