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- <text id=89TT2752>
- <title>
- Oct. 23, 1989: High Style For The 9-To-5 Set
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Oct. 23, 1989 Is Government Dead?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 70
- High Style for the 9-to-5 Set
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Donna Karan sells working women a look of their own
- </p>
- <p>By Barbara Rudolph
- </p>
- <p> America's retailers have precious little to cheer about
- these days. Many of the best-known U.S. department-store chains
- are up for sale. Garment sales have been stagnant, and profits
- are squeezed. But then there is Donna Karan, a women's-clothing
- designer whose creations send department-store executives into
- fits of giddy optimism. The Queen of Seventh Avenue, as the
- fashion press calls her, Karan is chief executive officer and
- head designer of a five-year-old company that expects to rake
- in $115 million in revenues this year. Her sportswear line
- arrived in stores eight months ago in one of the most successful
- launches in fashion history. Says Joan Kaner, senior vice
- president of the Neiman Marcus chain: "Donna's name is magic
- right now."
- </p>
- <p> Karan, 41, has earned a reputation as the sartorial savior
- of the modern working woman who is fed up with floppy bow ties
- and sexless designs. Karan's clothes are comfortable and
- practical, stylish and feminine. Among her trademarks: one-piece
- silk bodysuits, easy-fitting jackets, wrap skirts. Fashion doyen
- John Fairchild, publisher of Women's Wear Daily, lauds Karan as
- the most important American designer. Says he: "Donna
- understands a woman's body the way Coco Chanel did." A size 12
- herself, Karan boasts the rare and eternally marketable talent
- of cutting a skirt or a pair of pants so that they flatter a
- woman's hips even if she is not runway-thin.
- </p>
- <p> The designer's main collection, called Donna Karan New
- York, is in demand among an elite crowd that seldom blinks at
- a $1,100 price tag for a cashmere blazer or $510 for a high-neck
- silk blouse. But it is Karan's more congenially priced DKNY
- wardrobe that has struck a popular chord. Among its current best
- sellers: plaid wool jackets ($395), denim jeans ($85) and
- merino-wool cardigans ($200).
- </p>
- <p> As a hardworking woman in what is still a male-dominated
- star system, Karan is instantly simpatico to many of her
- customers. When she makes appearances at department stores,
- Karan acts like a wise older sister dispensing fashion tips and
- helping customers assemble her clothes into outfits. Says Karan,
- as she twirls her oversize black eyeglasses: "I am accessible.
- I see myself as a person who stays up all night and worries
- about her daughter (Gaby, 15) and her husband, and would like
- to get the carpeting ordered."
- </p>
- <p> When Karan was growing up, the rag trade was a family
- tradition. Her father, who died when she was 3, was a custom
- tailor. Her mother worked as a showroom model and saleswoman.
- Her stepfather sold women's apparel. Karan studied at Parsons
- School of Design in Manhattan, then worked as an assistant to
- the legendary Anne Klein. When Klein died in 1974, Karan was
- named her successor. At that moment she was the 26-year-old
- mother of a week-old baby.
- </p>
- <p> Karan and Louis Dell'Olio, a friend and classmate from
- Parsons, proved a formidable team at Anne Klein during their
- ten-year tenure. In 1982, when Karan launched Anne Klein II, a
- lower-priced line, she experienced for the first time the
- creative rush of designing an entirely new collection. She was
- restless but still afraid to leave the security of Anne Klein.
- Finally, her boss at the company, Frank Mori, pushed her out on
- her own. Recalls Mori: "It was like, `The bad news is you're
- fired. And the good news is you have your own company.'"
- Takihyo, the Japanese textile conglomerate that owned Anne
- Klein, put up an initial $3 million to help launch Donna Karan
- Co. The designer and Stephan Weiss, her second husband and
- partner, got a 50% stake in the business.
- </p>
- <p> Now the company is going through a challenging transition
- from a cozy, family-style operation to a more structured,
- hierarchical organization. Says Karan: "The growth is
- frightening. It truly is. My biggest dream is to allow this
- business to grow and not lose the integrity of what we have."
- Much of that task will fall to president Stephen Ruzow, a former
- executive at the Warnaco apparel company. Ruzow, 46, hired five
- months ago, is also attempting to smooth out production snags
- that have sometimes led to uneven quality in Karan's garments,
- which are mostly made in Manhattan and Hong Kong.
- </p>
- <p> Like most successful designers, Karan plans to diversify
- into the lucrative accessory business. She already licenses her
- name for lines of hosiery, eyeglasses, jewelry, shoes and furs.
- The firm is planning to enter the enticing but highly
- competitive fragrance market. At the same time, her clothes have
- bright prospects overseas. Karan's lines, now sold in only one
- exclusive London shop, Browns, will appear next March in two
- leading London department stores, Harrods and Harvey Nichols.
- </p>
- <p> As she contemplates her sprawling empire, part of Karan
- wants to pull back. The woman who says she designed her first
- solo collection for herself and "a group of us girls" seems
- unsure how she feels about becoming one of America's best-known
- fashion labels. "I don't want everybody walking around in my
- clothes. It's a terrible thing to say," Karan muses. But the
- Karan look is already nearly ubiquitous. One of her devotees is
- Candice Bergen, whose TV character Murphy Brown seems to have
- a Karan outfit for every occasion.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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