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Bill Blass: Fashion as Philosophy
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# : |
11647 |
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Section : |
LIFE
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| Issue
Date : |
9 / 1986 |
1,000 Words |
| Author
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Rachael Sheli Rachael Sheli is a freelance writer living in New York City
who covers the fashion field. |
It is more than a specific design, or the look of the moment: there is something unmistakable about a Bill Blass creation, much as there is something unmistakable about the women who wear them. What these women and their Blass clothes exude is a quality not frequently associated with fashion: authority.
For women like Barbara Walters, Grace Bumbry, and Claudette Colbert, it is the aura of their individual success in their professions. For others like Nancy Reagan, Pat Buckley, and Nancy Kissinger, it comes from being married to powerful men. For Doris Duke, Nan Kempner, and Mrs. Vincent Astor, it is part of the mystique of enormous inherited wealth and social position. For these and thousands of other women, known internationally or only in their own close circles, it comes of having and knowing the best in everything.
But the typical Blass creation is invested with an authority of its own, long before it ever appears on the back of a client, and even before the Bill Blass label is sewn inside. That authority comes from the sureness of line, the quality of fabric and construction, the inimitable touch of the man who is perhaps America's premier purveyor of elegance.
This exceptional talent was nurtured far from any of the fashion capitals of the world in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Bill Blass played high school football, worked on the paper, dabbled in art. But there had been, for him, a fascination with sketching that he recalls from his very early childhood. Sketches that he made when he was five or so already show touches of a very sure hand, touches that are still part of his sketching style
... (1956 of 5752 Characters)
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