Find your Fashion Style with Isabel Marant

Find your Fashion Style with Isabel Marant

Find your Fashion Style with Isabel Marant

November 7, 2015

At the weekend we advise to talk about fashion style and look from Isabel Marant in order to see how fashion makes our life more charming and alluring.

Isabel Marant is a French house of fashion founded in 1994 by designer Isabel Marant. The brand was launched initially in 1990 under the name “Twen,” before being renamed to Isabel Marant in 1994. Originally consisting only of a line of jerseys and knitwear, the brand is currently most popular for its shoes, which have been worn by many celebrities, including Kate Bosworth, Katie Holmes, Anne Hathaway and Hilary Duff.

Find your Fashion Style with Isabel Marant

The first show was shown in Spring/Summer 1995. In 2000, Marant expanded her brand by adding “Etoile,” which is designed to be more affordable and casual. The company has 10 shops worldwide: Paris, New York, Tokyo, Hong Kong, Seoul, Los Angeles, Beijing, Madrid, Beirut, London and has retailers in more than 35 countries. Isabel Marant has recently agreed to design collections for high street giant H&M, which sold out in minutes online causing the website to crash.

In her collaboration with H&M, Marant said, “The nice thing with H&M is they don’t want to try to do a cheap version of your own collection… They really respect the DNA of designers.”

Find your Fashion Style with Isabel Marant

The clothing has been described as a “combination of androgynous chic and bohemian nonchalance”. Since its inception, the brand has increased 30% in sales each year.

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In 2015 Marant was the subject of a Twitter storm under the hashtag #miBlusadeTlahui, which pointed out the uncanny similarity of some of Marant’s recent designs to those of indigenous Mexican designers, of Tlauhuitolpec in Oaxaca State, Mexico, who have been designing and making their original hand-sewn shirts for over 600 years in the style of the Mixe indigenous people. Marant’s uncredited apparent appropriation of the designs, virtually stitch-for-stitch, has aroused the anger of the Mixe people for whom the handmade manufacture of the shirts, and their sale, is an important economic and cultural factor.

Find your Fashion Style with Isabel Marant

The “plagiarism” issue has continued to dog Marant, being taken up by the UK Guardian newspaper in June 2015 by journalist Naomi Larsson, which reported that yet another design company had claimed copyright on the disputed garment, and quoting Marant’s office as admitting the design was from Tlauhuitolpec as a defence against the claim. The Mixe people have received no communication of this acknowledgment, according to the paper’s report.

Biography

Born in 1967 in Paris to a German mother and French father, Isabel Marant starts sewing at the age of 15 reworking old army jackets and remnants into a more bohemian wardrobe.Find your Fashion Style with Isabel Marant

She takes up design studies at Studio Berçot fashion school in 1985 and creates four years later a small collection of outsize jewelry bearing her own name. She launches a line of jersey and knitwear in 1990, named “Twen”.

Isabel establishes her own brand in 1994, setting up a studio in the Marais neighborhood in Paris. Her first show is held a year later in the debris-strewn courtyard of a squat, with her friends modeling. She opens her first store in 1998, in a former artist’s studio in the Bastille district. Eager to make her brand evolve, she launches the more casual and affordable “Isabel Marant Étoile” line in 1999.

Isabel opens her first stateside boutique in 2010 in New York Soho and expands her network of boutiques abroad since. She sets up her new head office at Place des Victoires in the heart of Paris in 2012.

Find your Fashion Style with Isabel Marant

« My brand developed little by little without any sophistication nor excess. My choice was to build it up step by step in order to keep complete freedom and integrity in the way I worked »

When Isabel Marant was studying fashion design at Studio Berçot, the school’s director, Marie Rucki, gave her an invaluable nugget of wisdom. “She told me to never design anything that I wouldn’t wear myself. That influenced my work from the start and gave me a realistic approach that continues to inform what I do,” the designer told BoF

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Find your Fashion Style with Isabel Marant

Indeed, influenced by Rucki’s practical piece of advice, Marant has built a business that, over 20 years, has seen consistent annual growth rates of between 20 and 30 percent and, in 2013, generated €150 million in revenue according to Marant’s chief executive, Sophie Durufle. The same year, a major collaboration with H&M confirmed the label’s heavyweight status, an achievement made all the more impressive by the fact that Marant retains full ownership of the company.

Often described as chic in a way that manages to be both bohemian and a little rock ‘n’ roll, Marant’s clothes are essentially American-style sportswear filtered through a uniquely French sensibility, which gives them an insouciant edge that is equally irresistible to women in Los Angeles, London and Seoul. The mainstays of this look exemplify Marant’s magic mix of ease and attitude: slim jeans and t-shirts, peasant blouses and lace mini-dresses, fringed boots and bags.

coveted-Find-your-Fashion-Style-with-Isabel-Marant-photos

As she tells it, the designer’s rise has been slow and steady — and very much a family affair, by which she means, not only that the company remains under her control, but that Durufle is Marant’s former sister-in-law. The recipe to her success? A well-defined, consistent aesthetic rooted in boho-chic, Parisian cool; clothes that blend fashion-forward design with wearability, advanced contemporary pricing, and, last but not least, Marant’s own relentless drive. “Isabel is the first one to arrive at work and the last one to leave,” says Durufle.

Find your Fashion Style with Isabel Marant

But, perhaps more than anything, building Isabel Marant has taken extraordinary clarity and focus.After finishing her studies at Studio Berçot, Marant chose not to work as an assistant for an established designer. “I had a very precise idea of what I wanted to do and I was totally determined to do it myself and not work for somebody else. I started with a jewellery collection because I could not afford to launch a garment collection,” Marant recalls of her start, back in 1989. She says she inherited her fearless drive to do her own thing from her parents. “My father and my mother both ran companies, so I grew up surrounded by this idea that if you really want to do something, you can do it.”

Find your Fashion Style with Isabel Marant

Traction came early for the designer, though at first the brand remained something of an insider’s secret. “When I launched my own fashion label and started doing shows in 1994, for the first couple of years my audience consisted only of my friends. No journalists came, because what I did was nice but not eccentric or historical. What my peers were doing was perhaps more intriguing, but it couldn’t sell,” she adds. “I may have not been in the newspapers, but I was selling from the beginning, while others weren’t and spending all their money on these extravagant shows, just to create an image.”

Find your Fashion Style with Isabel Marant

Marant says eschewing editorial attention was a strategic choice. “I knew how to attract press, but I firmly believed in first settling my company and making it work and only then doing something more fancy to please editors.”

In the beginning, Marant attracted a local following solely through word of mouth. “At first, we had no selling points in France. I would just have these private sales in my living room for friends. They, in turn, would bring their friends and so on. Before too long I had 400 people showing up.”

Find your Fashion Style with Isabel Marant

But a Parisian insider’s market alone was not enough to jumpstart her business in a significant way. What really propelled Marant’s label early on was the Japanese market. “We were lucky; we had Japanese retailers. That was massive and helped my brand a lot. They placed huge orders.”

Part of the reason why Marant’s collections were so well-received from the start was the fact that her aesthetic stood out from what was prevalent in fashion at the time. “What I was doing was different from the kind of super-clean minimalism, very influenced by Helmut Lang, that you saw everywhere,” she says. “My stuff had a strong ethnic element. I think that resonated, along with the comfortable fabrics and special colours that are still close to what I am doing today, even though my collections have evolved as I have evolved.”

Find your Fashion Style with Isabel Marant

Only after laying the commercial foundations of her business did Marant feel it was time to develop her brand. “Before getting too big too quickly, we wanted to build stone by stone, being very reasonable and taking our time to set up things, so that the base was strong,” says Marant. “Only once the company was operational and we had a clientele were we ready to work on image.”

Though the label had traction from the beginning, things really took off in the mid-aughts, a turning point Marant credits to making two critical hires in styling and PR.The shift began when Marant asked the French Vogue editor Emmanuelle Alt to style her shows. “At first I didn’t dare to ask her, I admired her so much,” recalls Marant. “But when I did (through Alt’s husband, the art director Franck Durand), we had so much fun together. We are exactly the same age and have the same fashion culture, so it was natural to collaborate.”

Since the company’s inception, Marant had been working with the same press officer, out of loyalty and because she had taken Marant on for free when the company was just starting up. But as her label began rising in profile, the front row of her shows remained curiously devoid of key international editors. After styling two shows for Marant, Alt told the designer she needed to reconsider her press representation if she wanted to continue working with her.

Fearful of losing Alt, Marant engaged the press agency she still works with today. “I had no idea at the time how important the press office you work with could be. In just one season the audience at my show totally changed.” Durufle adds: “The change was more in terms of visibility than numbers, because the numbers were strong already. We had a good business, thanks also to Étoile,” Marant’s diffusion line, which launched in 2000. But just as important as this was Alt’s styling, which added a vital injection of sex to Marant’s work. “Emmanuelle put Isabel’s woman on heels. That changed everything,” says Durufle. Marant concurs, “The clothes didn’t change. But Emmanuelle came with a pair of tight suede cuissards (thigh-high boots). That small decision totally changed the way the clothes appeared and how my label was perceived. It made it much more glamorous and sexy.”

Find your Fashion Style with Isabel Marant

At the time, while Marant’s label was well-known in France, Italy and parts of Asia, it had little presence in key markets like the US and UK. Indeed, after the changes to styling and communications, US expansion was another key catalyst for the brand. The designer opened her first standalone New York store in 2010 on the heels of what had already been rapid wholesale growth in the American market (which today accounts for about 30 percent of the Isabel Marant business). Fortuitously, the expansion coincided with a the culmination of a shift in women’s tastes, away from the over-sexualised aesthetic of the early 2000s, as epitomised by Tom Ford’s Gucci and Yves Saint Laurent, and towards Marant’s earthier, boho-chic look, which was still sexy and sophisticated.

Much has been made of Marant’s biggest hit product, the ubiquitous hidden-wedge sneaker known as the Bekett, which the brand launched in 2009 and has reissued every season since. But the designer underplays its importance as an engine of her success. “It’s the whole silhouette that has come to define me and people ask for, not one particular item,” she asserts. Yet the numbers speak for themselves. At the height of the sneaker’s success, in a single week in Paris alone, Marant was selling over a hundred pairs of the shoe. Now, it’s down to ten. (Famously — and to Marant’s chagrin — the shoe has been copied by everyone from Michael Kors, to Hogan, to Adidas).

Find your Fashion Style with Isabel Marant

Today, accessories account for 30 percent of Marant’s business. Her biggest markets, besides the Unites States, are Europe and Asia, where the label has a particularly strong presence in Korea. In recent years, online sales have driven significant growth for the brand, especially in the United Kingdom and Germany. In fact, Isabel Marant currently generates 40 percent of its revenues online, though the company still lacks its own e-commerce store. As for the future, the US market remains a key focus, where Marant plans to expand its retail network, opening a new store in San Francisco in the coming months.

Find your Fashion Style with Isabel Marant