Toronto Star

Carla Fendi, philanthro­pist, fashion force, dies at 79

- COLLEEN BARRY AND DANIELA PETROFF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MILAN— Carla Fendi, one of five sisters who transforme­d the family leather goods business into a luxury fashion house that was one of Italy’s first to win global renown, has died in Rome following a long illness. She was 79.

Fendi died Monday and the Romebased fashion house confirmed her death in a statement Tuesday, expressing pain for the loss and gratitude for her continued contributi­ons.

“She was for all of us a source of inspiratio­n and an example of dedication, culture of work and sensitivit­y to beauty,” the company said.

Carla’s parents, Edoardo and Adele Fendi, founded the company in 1925 with a store fronting the workshop in via del Plebiscito in Rome’s historic centre, but it was with the next generation that it surged to prominence as ready-to-wear took off in Italy.

The five Fendi sisters — Paola, Anna, Franca, Carla and Alda — took control of the family business after their father’s death and opened their first Fendi store in another location in Rome’s historic centre in 1964.

A year later, they hired a young designer named Karl Lagerfeld who helped catapult the Italian brand to global fame by elevating fur from staid symbols of luxury to fashion pieces, acquiring lightness and softness, becoming easier to wear and less pompous.

Under Lagerfeld’s direction, Fendi arguably became the most-famous furriers in the world. The brand also helped revolution­ize leather handbags in the 1990s, making them softer and less rigid, while Fendi’s niece, Silvia Venturini Fendi, invented the famed Fendi baguette bag inspired in shape by the traditiona­l French loaf.

“We said to ourselves: ‘today women are working. We need to change everything,’ ” Fendi was quoted by La Repubblica as saying. “No one had yet thought of the cross-body bag, practical, comfortabl­e, soft, light.”

The Fendi fashion house eased up on fur as pressure from animalrigh­ts activists diminished the market. Each sister had her role, and Carla Fendi, as Fendi president, was long the family business’s public face, becoming known as the “signora della moda,” or “lady of fashion.” They sold to the French luxury group LVMH in a deal that was completed in 2001, and she maintained her role as president until 2008. She was honorary president until her death.

“For her, nothing was impossible,” Venturini Fendi told RAI state television. “The challenges that she always confronted, also as a pioneer in her field. She always had a love of beauty.”

Besides her contributi­ons to fashion, Carla Fendi will be remembered for her support of Italian culture.

 ??  ?? Carla Fendi was president of the luxury Italian fashion house Fendi until 2008.
Carla Fendi was president of the luxury Italian fashion house Fendi until 2008.

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