I always love wearing Vivienne Westwood. Her dresses just seem to fit me perfectly, and she makes dresses for girls with curves - I love that.
To be a couture designer is not only to create dresses but to adapt your line to your private customers. It is why couture is expensive. You are like a doctor.
If faith itself has different dresses worn, What wonder modes in wit should take their turn?
Couture is more your own world, they come and buy head-to-toe - they buy the jewelry, bags, coats, dresses, bodies underneath.... But couture is not dead - it's taken another shape.
Young girls - like friends of my daughter's - always ask if we do prom dresses, and we do dresses that would be lovely, but £2,000 isn't realistic for most girls. The Debenhams collection will hopefully be great for that sort of event because the price point is much lower.
Well, my dresses are very tight and mostly all made for me - couture, baby.
I love wearing dresses, but more simplistic, classic-looking dresses.
One who dresses in rags that have been washed clean dresses cleanly to be sure, but raggedly nonetheless.
My dresses are very reasonably priced, for dresses that are cut on the body.
Rod always dresses for dinner - even if I just want to wear tracksuit bottoms, he dresses up.
God knows I wanted love... but the moment I had to choose between the man I loved and my dresses... I chose the dresses
I wore dresses all the time. I like to wear dresses.
The prettiest dresses are worn to be taken off.
I have never worn dresses by grands couturiers.
I don't believe in naming clients to get press. I hated it when I was a couture client. If the dresses don't sell themselves, there is something wrong.
Couture has a lot of issues today. Here in Paris there are oddly so few houses showing. And I'm not talking about the style. I'm talking about the sense of couture and these young actresses that you were talking about - they want long dresses that are not always the most innovative or the most interesting. So it's a bit lost.