An article in the New York Times June 14 is of interest. I am reprinting the article in
its entirety. It's about time older women get the attention long deserved in the fashion world. May they be an inspiration to all of us who have reached a certain age!
I applaud these women for their style, and photographer Ari Seth Cohen
for highlighting these chic aand fashionable older women.
Companies, are you listening? We are here and it's about time you listened!
From The New York Times - June 14, 2012
Ari Seth Cohen’s
Portraits of Older Women
By RUTH LA FERLA
Discovering Mimi
Weddell, the gauntly stylish actress who, at 90, was the subject of a 2009
documentary, was a turning point for Ari Seth Cohen. Mr. Cohen, a 20-something
photographer living in Seattle at the time, quickly decamped for Manhattan in
pursuit of his new fashion idol.
A doting Harold to
her Maude, he tracked her down, picked up his trusty Canon and began shooting
Ms. Weddell, who was the first in a stately parade of New Yorkers, aged from 60
to 100, whose images he began posting on Advanced Style, his blog.
Ari Seth Cohen |
Now 30, Mr. Cohen has staked out a turf in the blogosphere
that is distinctly his own, politely stalking voguish ladies of a certain age
just because he can. They inspire him, he said, with their startling freedom
and poise.
“They don’t have a job, they don’t have to impress their
bosses, their children, their lovers,” he said. In dressing, “they have no one
to please but themselves.”
Their audacity is a
central theme of “Advanced Style,” the book, out last month, and of a
documentary, a work in progress paid for through Kickstarter, the Internet
finance-your-project site. In print and on film, Mr. Cohen’s arrestingly
bedizened models embrace fashion with a sense of play.Ari Seth Cohen |
Tomorrow is another
day and another look,” Mr. Cohen is told by Debra Rapoport, who poses for him
in goldtone brocade trousers, which she alternates in other shots with bright
furs or a crazily sculptured tricorn hat.
Recording their
efforts, Mr. Cohen said, has been purely a labor of love. Yet in hindsight his
timing seems canny. As the population ages, this once neglected demographic is
gaining striking visibility, to say nothing of marketing clout.
“Many of these
individuals are living outside of the boxes that society has traditionally put
them in,” noted the editors at the Alliance for Aging Research, in a recent
newsletter titled “Fashion Savvy Seniors Help Redefine Old Age.” Delaying their
retirements or even starting new careers, the editors wrote, “they are making
an impact on relationships, sex and even fashion.”
Ari Seth Cohen |
Some are becoming
increasingly vocal.
“This is what 60
looks like,” declares Robin Bobbé, looking raffishly youthful in the headshot
accompanying her new blog on The Huffington Post. “I would like to get the word
out to the advertising world that we are strong, vital and confident.”
No worries, Ms. Bobbé. Marketers seem to be getting the
message. These days trendsetters like Iris Apfel, 91, once mere footnotes in
the world of style, are landing cosmetics contracts and selling handbags and
jewelry on late-night TV. Mr. Cohen’s subjects absorbed that message long ago.
“In some ways you
should always be in love,” a chicly turbaned Beatrix Ost tells Mr. Cohen in his
book, “and never say I can’t wear that because of my age.”
Your selection is a perfect one. These women have one mutual thing, they are all thin, which is an advantage for them ( especially in pictures ). They also happen to wear expensive clothing.
ReplyDeleteI like the first woman best; she has knocked down all boundaries - and succeeded.
The only thing that bothers me, is that these pictures should be in a book along with other great looking women of all ages.
I feel a bit bothered, that " older women " need a book of their own.
But, certainly A. Cohen has hit a gold vein here..
I love this! I needed a "picker upper" today. We need to think, dress and act like we feel inside - which is much younger than the number we're so haunted by.
ReplyDeleteThanks for this story. I loved the Harold and Maude reference. Stories like this make me want to retire to New York, so I can dress up and be seen every day. Or maybe just do Summers there or in Chicago. I really like Summer hats!
ReplyDeleteMy favourite photo is the woman in brown,simple,chic,elegant,agree with Mette being slender helps. Ida
ReplyDelete