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Of Rags and Riches
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16383 |
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BOOK WORLD
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| Issue
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5 / 1989 |
2,996 Words |
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Eric Y. Beaudan Eric Y. Beaudan is a free-lance writer based in Toronto,
Canada. He specializes in international affairs, security
policy, and aerospace. |
THE FASHION CONSPIRACY
Nicholas Coleridge
New York: Harper & Row, 1988
323 pp., $19.95
For someone who stumbled onto the fashion industry simply "by accident," Nicholas Coleridge has crafted a remarkably intelligent, intriguing, and riveting book. Because he approaches the topic from the vantage point of a curious bystander, not a seasoned fashion watcher, Coleridge's expose of the ambiguous world of "haute couture" smacks of adventure and well-placed naiveté. His descriptions of designers, buyers, and fashion editors read like the diary of a wondrous bushwhacker.
What prompted Coleridge to write The Fashion Conspiracy is the author's bewildered realization that a select group of individuals--most of them paranoid, eccentric, and very rich--manipulate international fashion in a way that has never been achieved or dreamed of before.
Coleridge recounts how a group of Irish nuns who settled in northern Thailand sparked his interest in fashion. The nuns set up a weaving cooperative to produce quality cotton, which caught the attention of Japanese designer Yohji Yamamoto. The material was shipped to Yamamoto's design house in Tokyo, and then to his factories in Japan for manufacture. Once completed, the garments were flown to Paris in time for the spring couture show, and then on to New York for the company's press office to promote. Finally, an American magazine commandeered the samples for a fashion shoot in the Seychelles. The garments originating in Thailand wound up in the Indian Ocean in the
... (1996 of 17173 Characters)
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