| Carine Roitfeld | |
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| Residence | Paris |
|---|---|
| Occupation | Editor |
| Employer | Condé Nast Publications |
| Title | Editor-in-chief, Paris Vogue |
| Predecessor | Joan Juliet Buck |
| Children | Julia and Vladimir |
Carine Roitfeld (born in Paris, France on 19 September 1954) is the Editor-in-Chief of the French edition of Vogue, a position she has held since 2001.[1]
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Her father, Jacques Roitfeld, who died in 1999, was a Russian film producer who worked in Berlin before he moved to Paris and met her mother. Roitfeld describes her mother as a "very classic Frenchwoman."[1][2] She describes her father as her "idol," and says that "he was always away, filming, at Cannes."[2] She describes her upbringing in the 16th arrondissment of Paris, France was "very Bourgeois. I'm not saying we were in diamonds, but very, very comfortable."[1]
Roitfeld and her partner Christian Restoin have been together for thirty years.[3] Restoin was the creator the Equipment clothing line, which he closed in 2001 after Roitfeld accepted the Vogue editorship.[1]. Roitfeld and Restoin have two children:
Julia graduated from Parsons School of Design in New York City in May 2006 and became the face of Tom Ford's fragrance Black Orchid in November 2006. [4][5]
Vladimir graduated from the University of Southern California Film School in 2007.
At 18, Roitfeld began modeling, having been scouted on the street in Paris by a British photographer's assistant.[2] "I wasn't a star," she says. "I was just booked for junior magazines."[2] She became a writer and then a stylist for French ELLE.[1] While she was working as a freelance stylist, her daughter, Julia, was in a children's fashion shoot for Italian Vogue Bambini in 1986, photographed by Mario Testino.[1][2] Roitfeld and Testino soon after began working as a team, doing advertising work as well as shoots for American and French Vogue.[1] Roitfeld went on to work as a consultant and muse for Tom Ford at Gucci and Yves Saint Laurent for six years.[1] She was approached by Conde Nast International Chairman Jonathan Newhouse to edit French Vogue in 2001.[1] In April 2006, there were rumors that Roitfeld was being approached by Hearst Corporation to take over Glenda Bailey's editor-in-chief position at U.S. Harper's Bazaar.[6]
She has contributed to the images of Gucci, Missoni, Versace, Yves Saint-Laurent, and Calvin Klein.[7]
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