Diane Von Furstenberg Popular Books

Diane Von Furstenberg Biography & Facts

Diane von Fürstenberg (born Diane Simone Michele Halfin; 31 December 1946) is a Belgian fashion designer best known for her wrap dress. She initially rose to prominence in 1969 when she married into the German princely House of Fürstenberg, as the wife of Prince Egon von Fürstenberg. Following their separation in 1972 and divorce in 1983, she has continued to use his family name. Her fashion company, Diane von Furstenberg (DvF), is available in over 70 countries and 45 free-standing shops worldwide, with the company's headquarters and flagship boutique located in Manhattan's Meatpacking District. She is the past chairwoman of the Council of Fashion Designers of America (CFDA), a position she held from 2006 to 2019; in 2014 was listed as the 68th most powerful woman in the world by Forbes; and in 2015 was included in the Time 100, as an icon, by Time magazine. In 2016, she was awarded an honorary doctorate from the New School. In 2019, she was inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame. Early years Fürstenberg was born Diane Simone Michele Halfin in Brussels, Belgium, to Jewish parents. Her father, Bessarabian-born Leon (Lipa) Halfin, migrated to Belgium in 1929 from Chişinău, Kingdom of Romania (now Moldova) and later sought refuge from the Nazis in Switzerland. Her mother was Greek-born Liliane Nahmias, from Thessaloniki, a Holocaust survivor, who was initially captured by the Nazis while she was a member of the Resistance during World War II. Eighteen months before Fürstenberg was born, her mother was a prisoner at Auschwitz concentration camp. Escaping from a concentration camp and weighing only 49 pounds, her mother was told by doctors that she should not have children, that she could die in childbirth and that her baby would not be normal. Fürstenberg has spoken broadly about her mother's influence in her life, crediting her with teaching her that "fear is not an option." Fürstenberg attended a boarding school in Oxfordshire. She studied at Madrid University before transferring to the University of Geneva to study economics. She then moved to Paris and worked as an assistant to fashion photographer's agent Albert Koski. She left Paris for Italy to apprentice with the textile manufacturer Angelo Ferretti in his factory, where she learned about cut, color and fabric. It was here that she designed and produced her first silk jersey dresses. Career and brand A year after marrying, Fürstenberg began designing women's clothes: "The minute I knew I was about to be Egon's wife, I decided to have a career. I wanted to be someone of my own, and not just a plain little girl who got married beyond her deserts." After the Fürstenbergs separated in 1973, Egon also became a fashion designer. After moving to New York, she met high-profile Vogue editor Diana Vreeland, who declared her designs "absolutely smashing". She had her name listed on the fashion calendar for New York Fashion Week, and so her business was created. She moved into an estate in Connecticut she named, Cloudwalk and has lived there ever since. In 1974, she introduced the knitted jersey "wrap dress", which became an iconic piece in women's fashion; it is included in the collection of the Costume Institute of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Soon after the launch, 25,000 dresses were selling each week; one million dresses had been sold by 1976, according to Forbes.. After the success of the wrap dress, von Fürstenberg was featured on the cover of Newsweek magazine in 1976. The accompanying article declared her "the most marketable woman since Coco Chanel." She launched a cosmetic line and her first fragrance, "Tatiana", named after her daughter. The New York Times reported that by 1979 the annual retail sales for the company were $150 million (equivalent to $630 million in 2023). In 1985, von Fürstenberg moved to Paris, where she founded Salvy, a French-language publishing house. She started a number of other businesses, including a line of cosmetics and a home-shopping business, which she launched in 1991. In 1992, von Fürstenberg sold $1.2 million (equivalent to $2.6 million in 2023) of her Silk Assets collection in two hours on QVC. She credits the success with giving her the confidence to relaunch her company. Fürstenberg relaunched her company in 1997, and reintroduced the wrap dress, which gained popularity with a new generation of women. Initially, the relaunch was a failure but, with the appointment of Paula Sutter as president of the brand, it was seemingly restored to its heyday of the mid-seventies. In 1998, she published her business memoir, Diane: A Signature Life. In 2004, she introduced the DVF by H. Stern fine jewelry collection, and launched scarves and beachwear. In 2006, she was elected president of the Council of Fashion Designers of America, a position she still holds. In 2008, she received a star on Seventh Avenue's Fashion Walk of Fame. In 2009, Michelle Obama wore the DVF signature "Chain Link" print wrap dress on the official White House Christmas card. That same year, a large-scale retrospective exhibition entitled "Diane von Furstenberg: Journey of a Dress" opened at the Manezh, one of Moscow's largest public exhibition spaces. Curated by Andre Leon Talley, it attracted media attention. In 2010, the exhibition traveled to São Paulo; and in 2011, to the Pace Gallery in Beijing. In 2010,the designer was awarded a gold medal at the annual Queen Sofía Spanish Institute Gold Medal Gala. In 2011, DVF introduced a home collection, and a signature fragrance, Diane. In 2012, von Fürstenberg launched her first children's collection with GapKids and a denim collaboration with Current/Elliott. Her clothes have been worn by celebrities including Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge, Gwyneth Paltrow, Kate Beckinsale, Madonna, Tina Brown, Jessica Alba, Susan Sarandon, Priyanka Chopra, Jennifer Lopez and Whitney Houston. Google Glass made its New York Fashion Week debut at the designer's Spring 2013 fashion show. In 2014, the designer joined the Ban Bossy campaign as a spokesperson advocating leadership roles for girls. She also released her second memoir, The Women I Wanted to Be, an autobiography which delved into her personal life and upbringing. Between 2017 and 2019, the DVF brand lost nearly $80 million, leading to an eventual 75% of the workforce made redundant in the U.S in May 2020. By 2018, sales, which had been $300 million before the 2008 recession, were down to $150 million. In 2018, the brand banned mohair use after a PETA exposé showed workers mutilating and killing goats to obtain it. All fur, angora and exotic skins were also banned from future collections. In 2020, DVF closed 18 of its 19 USA stores permanently. Philanthropy Fürstenberg is a director of the Diller – von Furstenberg Family Foundation, which provides support to nonprofit organizations in the areas of community building, education, human rights, arts, health and the environment. In 2010, the foundation cre.... Discover the Diane Von Furstenberg popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Diane Von Furstenberg books.

Best Seller Diane Von Furstenberg Books of 2024

  • Girl CEO synopsis, comments

    Girl CEO

    Katherine Ellison, Ronnie Cohen, Georgia Rucker & Tory Burch

    Rebel girls, young entrepreneurs, and other trailblazing tweens and teens will find inspiring success stories and practical advice for launching their own illustrious careersright ...

  • Diane von Furstenberg synopsis, comments

    Diane von Furstenberg

    Gioia Diliberto

    A sweeping biography of one of the most influential and controversial legends of late twentiethcentury fashion, an iconic designer whose colorful creations, including the “wrap dre...

  • Fifty Fashion Looks that Changed the 1970s synopsis, comments

    Fifty Fashion Looks that Changed the 1970s

    DESIGN MUSEUM ENTERPRISE LTD & Paula Reed

    The Design Museum and fashion guru Paula Reed present Fifty Fashion Looks that Changed the 1970s. The most exciting, influential and definitive looks of one of the most significant...

  • Cheap Chic synopsis, comments

    Cheap Chic

    Caterine Milinaire & Carol Troy

    “I think it’s terrific.” –Diane von Furstenberg, of the original edition of Cheap Chic   Beloved by designers and style mavens alike, the LBD of fashion guideswith a new forew...

  • The Woman I Wanted to Be synopsis, comments

    The Woman I Wanted to Be

    Diane von Fürstenberg

    One of the most influential, admired, and colorful women of our time: fashion designer and philanthropist Diane von Furstenberg tells the most personal stories from her life, about...

  • Fifty Dresses that Changed the World synopsis, comments

    Fifty Dresses that Changed the World

    DESIGN MUSEUM ENTERPRISE LTD

    Everything around us is designed and the word 'design' has become part of our everyday experience. But how much do we know about it? Fifty Dresses That Changed the World imparts t...

  • Glossy synopsis, comments

    Glossy

    Nina-Sophia Miralles

    'Dame Anna Wintour might be one of the bestknown and most successful journalists on the planet. But it wasn't always like that. When she started out on Vogue she was often so miser...

  • Skirts synopsis, comments

    Skirts

    Kimberly Chrisman-Campbell

    In a sparkling, beautifully illustrated social history, Skirts traces the shifting roles of women over the twentieth century through the era’s most iconic and influential dresses.W...