Alexandra Shulman

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Alexandra Shulman



Average rating: 3.69 · 2,690 ratings · 241 reviews · 25 distinct worksSimilar authors
Inside Vogue: A Diary Of My...

3.74 avg rating — 1,311 ratings — published 2016 — 6 editions
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Clothes and Other Things Th...

3.88 avg rating — 841 ratings4 editions
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Can We Still Be Friends

2.65 avg rating — 211 ratings — published 2012 — 7 editions
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The Parrots

3.23 avg rating — 163 ratings — published 2015 — 6 editions
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Clothes… and other things t...

3.89 avg rating — 125 ratings
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Elizabeth II: Princess, Que...

4.43 avg rating — 51 ratings
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UK Vogue July 2013 - Helena...

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Vogue Magazine British Edit...

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Vogue Magazine December 199...

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Vogue British Magazine Sept...

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“New York collections are often a commercial version of what Europe provided for the previous season. It’s what America does so well: the designers turn someone else’s idea into something that makes money.”
Alexandra Shulman, Inside Vogue: A Diary Of My 100th Year

“I feel like the industry hasn’t caught up to the fact that people don’t want to see clothes only in cool fashion pictures but in a context. This attitude is also completely mad when houses lend to street-style girls to be snapped by hordes of Japanese photographers as a way of marketing. Yet they won’t, for instance, want to lend something to be worn by a head of pathology in a hospital. How are we meant to inspire young girls…when worlds they admire, like high fashion, don’t encourage the notion that you can mix being a fashion plate with working in other fields?”
Alexandra Shulman, Inside Vogue: A Diary Of My 100th Year

“Despite the multitude of extraordinary changes that have taken place in almost every area of life, jewellery is still used for pretty well the same purposes as it has always been.
Primitive man is said to have worn a kind of ornamentation to enhance his sexual attraction as well as provide protection against all manner of disasters, from snakes to evil spirits. Cleopatra used jewels (with a particular fondness for emeralds) to seduce admirers and rivals not only on her body but in her home. They showed off her fabulous wealth and position. Julius Caesar ruled that only the highest born women could wear pearls, which were Rome’s most valued jewels. Not only does our jewellery mean something to each of us, but it also has meaning to those who view us. Jewellery has forever been a currency understood by all.”
Alexandra Shulman, Clothes and Other Things That Matter

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