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La Parisienne

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Everything posted by La Parisienne

  1. zimbio.com
  2. germainpire.info
  3. madame.lefigaro.fr
  4. puretrend.com
  5. gossipbestwoman.blogspot.com
  6. style.com
  7. addicted2glamour.blogspot.com
  8. journaldesfemmes.com
  9. style.com
  10. zimbio.com
  11. zimbio.com
  12. zimbio.com
  13. zimbio.com
  14. zimbio.com
  15. Harper's Bazaar
  16. Vogue Paris February 2012 Delphine Arnault by Claudia Knoepfel et Stefan Indlekofer
  17. style.com
  18. The Fashion Spot (Ceptuouse)
  19. Delphine Arnault (4 April 1975) is a French businesswoman with the LVMH. The daughter of Bernard Arnault, she is one of the richest women in the world; on September 24, 2005, she married Alessandro Vallarino Gancia, heir to an Italian wine fortune, and then divorced in 2010. In July 2012 she was pregnant and expecting her first child. Arnault was in 2008 one of the France's/world's richest women with a wealth exceeding €1.4 billion ($2 billion). In 2010 her networth stands at a reported €2.8 billion ($3.9 billion). At the age of 28 she became the only woman to have reached the position of director for LVMH. In 2002 she controlled 7.5% of the stocks in LVMH and is the second biggest individual stockholder Measured in turnover, Gilles Hennessy is the first. LVMH is the biggest luxury produce company in the world. In France she has been referred to as the Napoleon of the luxury product business, and as the Wolf in a cashmere coat. She became the HR manager for the LVMH group in 2008. Arnault has particularly contributed in the development of Dior Parfums. Arnault graduated from EDHEC Business School in Lille and the London School of Economics. She has been the leader of several organisations, not only those linked to her father's business, but also scholarly organisations like student organisations at the London School of Economics. Before joining her father's company she worked for McKinsey & Company in Paris.She has a silent personality and dislikes media attention. She appreciates the arts, particularly dadaism, and she covets collectibles, just like her father. Arnault married on Saturday, September 24, 2005, in the Roman Catholic Cathédrale Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Bazas in Gironde, classified by Unesco as a world heritage building. She married the 37 year-old Alessandro Vallarino Gancia, heir to Gancia, an Italian dynasty of wines. Her wedding became the main happening in 2005 for the French upper class. Her dress was designed by John Galliano for Dior. After the ceremony, the reception took place in the Château d'Yquem, in Bordeaux. The guests included personalities of the business world, politics and fashion. Among them, were John Galliano, who designed her haute couture dress for the wedding and the one for the reception, Bernadette Chirac, former French first lady, the designer Karl Lagerfeld, Glenda Bailey manager of the magazine Harper's Bazaar, the ministers Thierry Breton, Jean-François Copé and Renaud Dutreil. The former French president Nicolas Sarkozy joined them for dinner in the castle of Yquem. Some photos were published in an issue of European Hello! magazine. One press release commented, "The world's hottest billionaire is finally off the market."
  20. http://www.bellazon....ship-2013-live/ http://www.bellazon....live-streaming/ Done. (~ M*)
  21. With the house’s founder looking on, Geraldo da Conceicao showed his debut collection for Sonia Rykiel, in the brand’s first runway outing under new owners Fung Brands Ltd. Da Conceicao kicked off with Rykiel’s signature knits, here in the shape of structured suits that paired slim-fitting jackets featuring graphic necklines with narrow skirts or slightly drop-crotch pants. That paved the way for a more experimental approach, with textures such as wool fringe, beaver pelts and fluffy angora used to create sporty silhouettes accentuated by oversize pockets. Though he dabbled with pastels, including baby blue and bubblegum pink, da Conceicao was most convincing when he stuck to black — especially the terrific loosely constructed leather dresses. With this dynamic, if at times uneven, effort, the designer was clearly seeking a balance between the Rykiel DNA and his own harder-edged aesthetic. The two merged admirably in a trio of simple black dresses but the final parade of models, all clad in sweaters and droopy flared trousers, felt like a forced reference to Rykiel’s traditional group finales — but without her devil-may-care Parisian charm. Source: wwd.com
  22. http://s4.postimage.org/oegccdnf1/image.jpg (Partial Nudity) wwd.com
  23. http://s12.postimage.org/54xcqxrgt/image.jpg (Partial Nudity) wwd.com