Since I discovered my first Seventeen Magazine it became my dream to work in Fashion. 
  | 
| Brooke Shields 1978 | 
The first time I realized there were influencers of fashion was when
 I was 12 and my mother gave me my first Seventeen
 Magazine.   She delivered it to me on a whim as an impromtu gift.  She 
had no idea that it would change my life. . .I had, as usual, refused to
 go into the grocery store with my  mother as she was incredulously, 
horrifically, slow at picking   out vegetables. Lots of thumbing and 
squeezing. I pleaded with her to let me wait in the car.  I would lock 
all the doors, I promised, and scream bloody- murder if anyone tried to 
"kidnap" me.  I hated the grocery      store.  Unusually, my mother 
quickly ran in, and came out a moment later, with the Seventeen magazine. 
  | 
| Bonnie Lyshoir & Joyce Wilford 1971 | 
    
From that moment on, I was hooked on Fashion.  Each month, I 
would  wait impatiently at 
the end of our long, country, drive-way, by the mailbox    for my mother's Vogue
 to come.  We would spend the afternoon obsessing over every page and 
detail.  My mother was very opinionated about the fashions and the 
models.  She would often remark impolitely, I thought, that the model's 
hair was too crazy, or she would complain that the make-up was over the 
top and unrealistic, or that the outfits seemed ridiculous and too 
matchy. 
"I mean, who would wear silver stars on their cheeks.  That is just cheap!" she commented. 
"Her nose looks like a monument in that lighting!"  
Honestly,
 she had a comment for everything from the expressions of the models, to
 the size and shape and colors of the dresses.  She was impossibly 
critical.  But I found it more then entertaining and her lack of 
intimidation for the Bible of Fashion aka, Vogue,  was 
impressive.  She thought of the magazine as pure entertainment.  I felt 
that my mother exuded an inner confidence.  I mean really, who were 
"they" to tell "us" what to wear.  She would even criticize the prices. 
 
"That's
 nothing but  a shift dress, it has no shape, one thousand dollars is 
outrageous,  I could make that frock for $5 dollars and sew it in one 
afternoon."  
The amazing thing was that she could and she did.  She even made the most difficult patterns in Vogue
 and with meticulous detail with fabrics as difficult as brocade (it's 
tough and nubby, you have to do the right stitching or the seems look 
sloppy or silk chiffon (it slips alot).
  | 
| Twiggy 1967 | 
The point is that she gave me the courage and confidence to find my own 
style.   Her attention to the details, made me realize how important 
fashion is.  The different impressions that can be made when you wear 
various styles.  The playground that is there for discovering different 
sides of your own personality.  
  | 
| Niki and Krissy 1993 | 
I spent years creating my own pinterest of sorts on my bedroom wall, 
posting, editing and re-pinning the trends of the moment or shoes, or 
looks I admired from every magazine I came across including National 
Geographic.   I had unconsciously learned the name of every top model. I
 had a small obsession with Niki Taylor, I felt that my coloring 
resembled hers. Oh, how I wished I could grow six inches and model 
myself.  When I confessed this to my mother she responded with an
 impatient   frown. Girls were not supposed to aspire to modeling, in 
her opinion.
 "Oh no, you don't want to be tall, petite is much better, tall 
people are so gawky and they don't look good in clothes, only in pictures."
At five, four and three quarters, I tried hard to believe that was true.  I
 think I even lamented the death of Niki Taylor's sister, Krissy, they 
seemed to have the perfect attributes and such an exciting life at such 
young ages.   The international attention 
  | 
| Milla Jovovich 1988 | 
she brought to inhalers and asthma was invaluable for many.  
And then there was the model queen, Milla Jovavich.  She said in an 
interview once that she was born to be a model.  I thought that was the 
absolute truth.  
I could easily quiz myself about the designer in every fashion spread on 
sight.  Some were very easy to spot. Issey Miyaki for example with all 
of his Rhythm Pleats and diverse elegant angles. Others not so much, but
 they all seemed to have signature style, a thread that carried them 
through from season to season, an uspeakable essence that made them, 
"them." The introduction of Costume Nationale and their irregular pants,
 and pieces in black.  The universal appeal of Karl Lagerfeld with his 
constant consideration for the originality of Coco Chanel and adapting 
and reinventing it for the future.  Miuccia Prada with her many 
contradictory amorphous peices that somehow flattered the female figure.
 
It was only in high school that I began to realize that some people 
somewhere, were responsible for inventing and creating these images that
 I was in love with.  Suddenly I wanted to know about the people behind 
the glamour, behind the heavanly visuals that appeared in my mailbox 
each month.  How did they do it?  Where were they going?  What did they 
gather their inspiration from?  Since I wasn't going to become a model, 
how could I become one of them?
Manhattan, Paris, London, Milan - these were the fashion hubs. . . Can anyone 
become part of the fashion industry?  How do you do it?  How to 
interview well. . . What to wear to fashion interviews?  When to talk 
and when to be silent. . . 
Please embark with me on my ten day journey about how to break into the 
fashion world.  . . And in the meantime read this fabulous NYTimes 
article about Amy Astley whom I worked with at Vogue about creating the 
images that teens adore and how to keep a constant age-revolving 
clientele coming back for more.  
Also check out this great app from the NYTimes. .  It will keep you abreast of all things fashion!  I rely on it daily.
XX, Libby