A Quote by Edie Campbell

What I like about Yves Saint Laurent Black Opium is that it's an understated scent that's somehow familiar. — © Edie Campbell
What I like about Yves Saint Laurent Black Opium is that it's an understated scent that's somehow familiar.
Yves Saint Laurent was the first person who made me feel like a woman.
I am not really sure that Diana Vreeland did Yves Saint Laurent a favor, as opposed to the world, by putting that exhibition at the Met in 1983. Because I'm sure that Saint Laurent started looking back at his own work. You see that with artists, don't you? Once they get their first retrospective, it's really hard for them to push ahead.
I like Chanel and Yves Saint Laurent. I have some great Balenciaga jackets and I'm shoe crazy.
I just have more Yves Saint Laurent in my closet, but it is pretty much the same - I just wear black almost 365 days of the year. I am married to it.
Yves Saint Laurent mascara is the best I've ever tried.
Yves Saint Laurent hated fashion. He loved style.
I love designers like Lanvin, Yves Saint Laurent and Karl Lagerfeld, but I also like the preppy look championed by Tommy Hilfiger.
My earliest influences were Coco Chanel and Yves Saint Laurent.
I am not ashamed to admit that I'm wearing Yves Saint Laurent from top to toe.
All the drawings and sketches and clothes of Yves Saint Laurent in the '70s were so colorful, so bright.
Yves Saint Laurent has a special place in my heart because he was my mother's favorite designer.
Haute couture is a legitimate subject for Yves Saint Laurent and could resume one day.
At Yves Saint Laurent, I felt like the son-in-law - like I was part of the family, but not quite. When I was fired, I felt like the widow.
Yves Saint Laurent will never go out of business so long as I'm buying mountains of Touche Eclat.
There's nothing that really motivates me anymore and demands that I get up in the morning. In the past it was Yves Saint Laurent.
Let's talk about that for a moment, about the couple that Yves Saint Laurent and I were. Like all couples we went through "storms," as the Jacques Brel song says. But if there's one area where we never had the slightest disagreement, it was art. Never. Not once. Not about painting, not about opera, not about theater. We were always in complete communion. Of course, that's how all of the collection came into being.
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