Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American designer Tory Burch.
Last updated on December 3, 2024.
Tory Burch is an American fashion designer, businesswoman, and philanthropist. She is the Executive Chairman and Chief Creative Officer of her own brand, Tory Burch LLC. She was listed as the 88th most powerful woman in the world by Forbes in 2020.
I love blue in all its shades and textures. I wear navy like others wear black, and I love the blue in flowers - cornflowers, delphiniums.
I have always believed in 'less is more' in everything I do, from work to my personal life.
I've been writing an ongoing letter to my children since they were born, full of recollections of their childhoods. I've filled two journals. It's a great thing to do as a mother - you forget a lot as you go along, but reading over what you've written brings all the memories back.
I've worked in many companies, and I think that, number one, if you are going to have a great environment, you produce great work... If people are happy, that's what's important. Life is short.
I never go out during the day without sunglasses.
When I started my company, many people said I shouldn't launch it as a retail concept because it was too big a risk. They told me to launch as a wholesaler to test the waters - because that was the traditional way.
For me, if I can design beautiful things that have the price be lower, I am thrilled.
Being a sensitive, thoughtful person opens you up for criticism and being affected by it.
I love exploring New York and I think that's what is so exciting about it. You find places that you've never heard of or seen before all the time.
Every job that you have might not be the perfect job, but you really take away different things, and you create relationships.
You have to be savvy and sharp and also straightforward with your customer. I think that authenticity is really important.
I go to concerts about once a month.
Growing up, I wanted to be Chris Evert.
I think when I was on the corporate ladder, it was very difficult to maintain the hours. It's a little easier when you have you're an entrepreneur.
I'm very forgiving so I forgive most things, really.
It was ingrained in me to be gracious.
I just love the energy of going into different areas of New York.
My approach to beauty is 'less is more,' but I usually wear a pinky-nude lip color, like my Pas du Tout.
There's so many ways of making product design easier, more efficient, quicker. People are now taking DNA from cows and growing leather. The implications of that, in what it has from a grain standpoint, are enormous.
I wanted to help women and their families.
I am not much of a cook.
There's no such thing as an overnight success.
I think women want to look beautiful. I think that's an important thing. It is relevant.
It's very passe to think women want to spend a fortune on clothes.
There's a negative connotation to ambitious women, and I think that we should be able to be proud of being ambitious and not shy away from that, if that... is what you want to do.
There's a Diebenkorn painting - 'Ocean Park No. 68' - that is the color of a swimming pool and always reminds me of summers at the beach.
If I had to read only one author, it would be Gabriel Garcia Marquez because I love the mystical, magical quality of his writing.
Big businesses can help by engaging aspiring entrepreneurs and promoting initiatives which support small businesses from within.
There are never enough hours in the day.
I am always interested in designing things that have a great price point attached to it.
I think you can have it all. You just have to know it's going to work.
I grew up on a farm in Pennsylvania, where my parents raised German shepherds - we had about 30 dogs at any given time.
I went to an all-girls school in a uniform and always got detention for wearing colorful boxer shorts under my kilt.
I love red licorice, but any bright candy - tangy taffy, Fruit Roll-Ups - does the trick.
For our Spring 2015 collection, I was inspired by the spirit of the artist Francoise Gilot.
I could eat gazpacho three times a day.
My father, Buddy Robinson, was superchic - a dandy. He always wore dinner jackets at night and espadrilles in the summer, but with his own flair. He was even well dressed when riding a tractor or listening to a ball game on the radio.
I like being behind the scene.
When I design a garment or a piece of accessory, the first question I ask myself is, 'Would I wear it?'
One of my greatest talents is recognizing talent in others and giving them the forum to shine.
I just like easy clothes - comfort.
I grew up with very elegant parents; their black and white photographs and style are still a huge source of inspiration in designing my collections.
I'm proud to be American and very happy that women like my brand.
My company is an extension of me, so when I designed my stores I wanted people to feel that they were in my home.
My biggest challenge every day is to be a great mother and a great businesswoman.
Many people think that buying a fake product is harmless, but counterfeiting is estimated to result in annual losses of over $20 billion dollars to American companies.
I wanted stores that would feel like a comfortable room in my apartment, cozy and colorful and different.
Entrepreneurs have a great ability to create change, be flexible, build companies and cultivate the kind of work environment in which they want to work.
I've learned time management, organization and I have priorities.
When I think about fashion I think women will never lose that appetite for fashion.
Each job I had wasn't necessarily the perfect job, but I always talk to young women about how you really have to take certain things from each job and learn from that and then move on to something you really want to do.
I drive an Escalade.
I wanted to create a new way of looking at retail.
My mother would be the person all of my friends would go to for advice.
We need to get women to the point where they aren't apologizing. Its time to take ownership in our success.
Never underestimate the impact of a small act.
If it doesn’t scare you, you’re probably not dreaming big enough.
Remember: if the most unique ideas were obvious to everyone, there wouldn’t be entrepreneurs. The one thing that every entrepreneurial journey has in common is that there are many, many steps on the road to success.
Having an environment that is supportive is really important for success.
Being an entrepreneur isn’t just a job title, and it isn’t just about starting a company. It’s a state of mind. It’s about seeing connections others can’t, seizing opportunities others won’t, and forging new directions that others haven’t.