A Quote by Jonathan Anderson

I didn't reinvent clothing; I reinvented the edit. — © Jonathan Anderson
I didn't reinvent clothing; I reinvented the edit.
It takes courage to reinvent joys, to reinvent opportunities, to reinvent dreams, to reinvent connections, to reinvent hopes that you have set aside.
I write a chapter, then edit it and edit it and edit it and edit it. I don't think we mine creativity from within. It's bestowed from on high, from God.
I love to simplify and edit the contents of just about anything, but women's closets hold particular appeal to me. I edit mine about four times a year and hold a yearly 'clothing swap' to encourage my girlfriends to do the same.
People always tell me, 'Reinvent yourself, re-this, re-whatever.' I haven't reinvented myself. It's an honest evolution. I've always been authentic.
I do like a song that can look good on a page without even being sung. I edit and edit and edit.
Mr. Koons's work has always inspired architects, which I think is very interesting. I think he is an artist who has reinvented himself so many times and reinvented so many different series.
I don't think writing stops until the film is out. In the edit, it's another draft. [The script] is the food for set, and then the set is food for the edit, and the edit is food for the screen. It's constant, and this is just the first stage of it.
It is bad enough to reinvent the wheel. What really hurts is when they reinvent the flat tire.
Hell is reimagined by every generation. We have to reinvent the worst so that we can reinvent the best.
I liked pretending to be other people: I could reinvent myself, reinvent my own reality.
The network is opening up some amazing possibilities for us to reinvent content, reinvent collaboration.
The women I gravitate to are the ones who defy convention and reinvent themselves - hence, they reinvent the world around them.
In TV, you are much more likely to see the episode closer to the script as written - in terms of the order of the scenes - than you would in a movie, and here's why: you don't have as many days to edit. You have 10 to 12 weeks or more to edit a feature, and you have four days to edit TV. That's a huge difference.
[Writing] is edit, edit, edit. It's almost like getting a boat ready to go to sea. You've still got a countless number of things left to fix, but you've just got to go, "O.K., everybody get on the boat. We're going, ready or not."
It's just a great, legendary comic book hero and it's one that has never been kind of been brought back to life after Lynda Carter. I mean, it's a reinvention. When Tim Burton reinvented Batman after Adam West, and when Donner reinvented Superman after George Reeves, it's time to do that with Wonder Woman.
I had never seen anyone edit the way that I edit before I did it, and it's just what felt right to me.
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