The Original
Harper's Bazaar Australia|September 2019

As Marc Jacobs branches into skincare, he talks beauty beginnings, ritual and the magic of drag.

Fiorella Valdesolo
The Original

Imagine, for a moment, the gems that would go viral had Diana Vreeland lived in the age of Twitter. Yes, the iconic magazine editor was known for her impeccable eye and her generally fabulous lifestyle, but just as significant was her quick and irrepressible wit, apparent in the surfeit of sharply observed bon mots that have survived her. Such as, “You don’t have to be born beautiful to be wildly attractive.” Or, “Too much good taste can be boring.” Or even, “People who eat white bread have no dreams.” Her “Why Don’t You” column alone, which first appeared in a 1936 issue of US Harper’s BAZAAR, was a bounty of quips in the form of advice: Why don’t you “knit yourself a little skullcap?” “turn your old ermine coat into a bathrobe?” and “wash your blond child’s hair in dead champagne, as they do in France?” But, in 2019, the Vreeland-ism that feels perhaps most relevant is a word she coined way back in 1965: youthquake. Conceived to describe the seismic shifts happening in Britain’s youth culture at the time, the term seems just as fitting now as we find ourselves in the midst of another youth-led wave of change.

This story is from the September 2019 edition of Harper's Bazaar Australia.

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This story is from the September 2019 edition of Harper's Bazaar Australia.

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