Photos of fashion designers whose names you know, but who you might not be able to pick out of a lineup. What does Manolo Blahnik look like? He looks like a guy with a lot of money. Maybe you've seen already photos of fashion designers at their own runway shows. Maybe you already know what all the people on this list look like. Great! But this list is for folks who are wondering about the faces behind the famous brands, and also the bodies and the clothes.
This list of fashion designer photos includes information about the company founders themselves, including when they started their famous brands. Some of the famous fashion designers on this list are long gone, their companies now run by family members or other people. Here are photos of famous shoe designers as well as high fashion designers of both men's and women's apparel.
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Alexander McQueen
Lee Alexander McQueen founded his British luxury fashion house in 1992. He committed suicide in 2010 when he was 40 following years of drug abuse and the recent death of his mother.
Christian Dior
Christian Dior started his fashion career working with designer Robert Piguet in the late-1930s. He founded his fashion house in 1946, and his designs were embraced by Harper's Bazaar editor-in-chief Carmel Snow, who propelled the Dior name into the international spotlight.
Christian Louboutin
After working as an apprentice for Roger Vivier, the man who invented the stiletto heal, Christian Louboutin went on to work for Chanel, Yves Saint Laurent, and Maud Frizon before starting his own company in 1991. His shoes have gone on to become the most popular brand amongst fashionistas, celebrities, and shoe lovers around the world.
Coco Chanel
Gabrielle Bonheur Chanel founded Chanel S.A. in 1909. She died in 1971 at age 87.
Chanel is now run by the grandsons of Pierre Wertheimer, a venture capitalist who helped establish Parfums Chanel in the late 1920s. Karl Lagerfeld is the Creative Director.
Cynthia Rowley
Cynthia Rowley launched her fashion line in New York in the early 1980s. Thanks to her tenacity and innovation, the Cynthia Rowley Collection is now being sold all over the world.
Donna Karan
Donna Karan was an assistant designer at Anne Klein in the late 1960s, and she was head of the design team from 1974 - following Klein's death - until 1985. That year, she showed her first women's clothing collection.
Emilio Pucci
Emilio Pucci designed uniforms for his skiiling team at Reed College in the 1930s. In 1948, his skiwear was featured in Harper's Bazaar. Marilyn Monroe, a fan who helped further his career, was buried in a green Pucci dress. He died in 1992 at age 78.
Pucci's daughter Laudomia Pucci continued to design under his name after his death, and LVMH (Louis Vouitton-Moet-Hennessy Group) bought 67% of the company in 2000. Christian Lacroix worked as Creative Director at Pucci from 2002-2005.
Manolo Blahnik
Manolo Blahnik worked at a vintage clothing shop while in school in Paris in 1965. A few years later, he worked in London as a buyer for the fashion boutique Zapata and wrote for L'Uomo Vogue. After years spent sketching footwear, he created his first shoes in 1972 for the swinging '60s designer Ossie Clark. Blahnik bought Zapata from its owners, opened his own boutique, and was featured on the cover of U.L. Vogue in 1974.
Guccio Gucci
In 1921, he founded The House of Gucci, a small leather saddlery shop in Florence. He expanded to Rome in 1938, Milan in 1951, and Manhattan in 1953. He died in 1953
His sons Aldo and Rodolfo Gucci ran Gucci Shops, Inc. from 1953 until 1986, but grandson Maurizio sold the company to Bahrain-based Investcorp in 1988.
Fun Facts: Aldo Gucci went to prison for tax evasion, and Maurizio Gucci was murdered in 1995 by hitmen hired by ex-wife Patrizia Reggiani.
Orla Kiely
Orla Kiely started her career as a hat designer before creating the patterned handbags that would make her famous. She and her husband, Dermott Rowan, founded the Orla Kiely Partnership in 1997.