366
Fashion Jobs
BOBBI BROWN COSMETICS
Senior Education Manager, Bobbi Brown, Apac
Permanent · HONG KONG
TOM FORD
Marketing Director, Tom Ford Beauty
Permanent · HONG KONG
ESTÉE LAUDER COMPANIES
Assistant Demand Planning Manager
Permanent · HONG KONG
ESTÉE LAUDER - BRAND
Retail Marketing Manager, Estée Lauder
Permanent · HONG KONG
CLINIQUE
Senior Marketing Manager, Clinique
Permanent · HONG KONG
LOUIS VUITTON MALLETIER
Repair Operations Specialist
Permanent · HONG KONG
LOUIS VUITTON MALLETIER
Specialist - Client Development
Permanent · HONG KONG
LOUIS VUITTON MALLETIER
Senior Specialist - Client Development
Permanent · HONG KONG
BENEFIT COSMETICS
Retail & Operations Manager
Permanent · HONG KONG
CHRISTIAN DIOR COUTURE
Logistics Officer - Sales Administration
Permanent · CAUSEWAY BAY
LORO PIANA
Client Development Manager
Permanent · HONG KONG
BOBBI BROWN COSMETICS
Senior Education Manager, Bobbi Brown, Apac
Permanent · HONG KONG
CHANEL
Business Systems Manager – Learning/Collaboration/Talent
Permanent · TAIKOO SHING
CHANEL
Assistant Payroll Manager - HR Business Services, Asia Pacific
Permanent · TAIKOO SHING
CHANEL
Senior Client Engagement Executive
Permanent · TAIKOO SHING
CHANEL
Senior Manager, People Sustainability Reporting
Permanent · TAIKOO SHING
CHANEL
IT Asset Manager, Asia Pacific
Permanent · TAIKOO SHING
CHANEL
Head of Governance & Operations, Asia Pacific
Permanent · TAIKOO SHING
CHANEL
Merchandising Manager
Permanent · TAIKOO SHING
CHANEL
Head of Learning Ecosystem And Retail Learning & Development, Asia Pacific
Permanent · TAIKOO SHING
CHANEL
Sustainability Manager (Sustainable Built Environment), Asia Pacific
Permanent · TAIKOO SHING
CHANEL
Assistant Project Manager, Asia Pacific
Permanent · TAIKOO SHING
By
AFP
Published
Sep 6, 2009
Reading time
3 minutes
Download
Download the article
Print
Text size

Celebrity designer out to conquer his native France

By
AFP
Published
Sep 6, 2009

PARIS, Sept 6, 2009 (AFP) - Celebrity Hollywood designer Christian Audigier is all over Paris this week, talk-of-the-town in the media, splashed on buses and looking out from giant billboards placed at strategic fashion hot-spots.

Christian Audigier
Christian Audigier

The self-made multi-millionaire with the Midas touch is out to tackle his last frontier -- conquering his native France.

"France is the world's toughest market to crack, they're experts, connoisseurs," he told AFP. "I had to make it in America before I could return home."

Audigier could well be dubbed the "Cinderella" of fashion.

A poor boy from southern France who dropped out of school in his teens and became a shop assistant, the 51-year-old friend to Michael Jackson and a host of other VIPs, currently estimates his worth at a cool 250 million dollars.

Wearing red Gucci pants and shoes "I think are Balmain", the hyperactive deep-tanned fashion mogul smilingly says as a driver dusts down his luxury Maybach limousine: "I am proud of my history."

In Paris this week he opened a four-storey showroom, bought a flat on one of the posher streets, rolled out his lines at a key fashion event -- and confirmed his purchase of Michael Jackson's (more than 30-million-dollar) last LA home as a tribute to the "King of Pop".

A film he loaned a prime TV network shows Jackson at Audigier's 50th birthday saying "You're a wonderful human being and the King of Fashion."

Yet Audigier was a 40-something nobody who had lived in France and Bali and had a taste for fashion when he hit Los Angeles in 2000.

"I had talent but didn't exploit it properly, I used it to survive and live a peaceful life," he said.

"But when I arrived in the United States, I had to get down to work. Insisting is existing, and that's what I did."

Audigier first made his mark by reviving the "Von Dutch" streetwear label and turning it into a global phenomenon, partly through luck.

Meeting Britney Spears in the street, he gave her a first Von Dutch baseball cap and a few days later hoisted one on Justin Timberlake in a nightclub. When the pair split up weeks later, they featured on the cover of People magazine, wearing the caps.

In 2004, he branched out on his own with a line inspired by Californian tattoo artist Don Ed Hardy. Learning from the Spears-Timberlake episode, he sent out clothes to stars and used the paparazzi, hotel and restaurant staff to spread the word.

"Americans, who then dressed very conservative and very corporate, liked the colour and my European twist," he said. "And marketing the brands through celebrities who are known worldwide was how I operated."

Before long his flamboyant streetwear was a hot favourite with Hollywood stars. He boasted Madonna, Mariah Carey, Sylvester Stallone, Puff Daddy and Kanye West among his clients.

Audigier continues to send designs to stars for free, occasionally hitting the jackpot, such as when Madonna wore an Ed Hardy t-shirt on her media headlined trip to Malawi to adopt a little boy.

Could he have made a similar fortune overnight in France? "No. France is a very small country," he said, "with celebrities who are lesser known worldwide."

"It is the immensity of the country in the US that gives you the chance to expand a brand. You have to learn how to produce and deliver on time.

"You can go faster, do better, and do nicer there," he added.

Self-made man Audigier, who is investing two million euros in his France launch and plans to open several boutiques, already has outlets in Britain, Germany, Italy and Spain.

His brand, which also makes champagne and wines, has a yearly turnover of 600 million dollars after only four years, he said.

"I'm not going to be looking for celebrities to help launch in Europe," he said. "I've become a celebrity in my own right. The product will do the rest."by Claire Rosemberg

Copyright © 2024 AFP. All rights reserved. All information displayed in this section (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the contents of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presses.