The News-Times (Sunday)

Iris Apfel, fashion icon, dies at 102

- Associated Press

NEW YORK — Iris Apfel, a textile expert, interior designer and fashion celebrity known for her eccentric style, has died. She was 102.

Her death was confirmed by her commercial agent, Lori Sale, who called Apfel “extraordin­ary.” No cause of death was given. It was announced on her verified Instagram page on Friday, which a day earlier had celebrated that Leap Day represente­d her 102ndand-a-half birthday.

Born Aug. 29, 1921, Apfel was famous for her irreverent, eye-catching outfits, mixing haute couture and oversized costume jewelry. A classic Apfel look would, for instance, pair a feather boa with strands of chunky beads, bangles and a jacket decorated with Native American beadwork.

With her big, round, black-rimmed glasses, bright red lipstick and short white hair, she stood out at every fashion show she attended.

Her style was the subject of museum exhibits and a documentar­y film, “Iris,” directed by Albert Maysles.

“I’m not pretty, and I’ll never be pretty, but it doesn’t matter,” she once said. “I have something much better. I have style.”

Apfel enjoyed late-inlife fame on social media, amassing nearly 3 million followers on Instagram, where her profile declares: “More is more & Less is a Bore.” On TikTok, she drew 215,000 followers as she waxed wise on things fashion and style and promoted recent collaborat­ions.

“Being stylish and being fashionabl­e are two entirely different things,” she said in one TikTok video. “You can easily buy your way into being fashionabl­e. Style, I think is in your DNA. It implies originalit­y and courage.”

She never retired, telling “Today”: “I think retiring at any age is a fate worse than death. Just because a number comes up doesn’t mean you have to stop.”

“Working alongside her was the honor of a lifetime. I will miss her daily calls, always greeted with the familiar question: “What have you got for me today?,” Sale said in a statement. “Testament to her insatiable desire to work. She was a visionary in every sense of the word. She saw the world through a unique lens — one adorned with giant, distinctiv­e spectacles that sat atop her nose.”

Apfel was an expert on textiles and antique fabrics. She and her husband Carl owned a textile manufactur­ing company, Old World Weavers, and specialize­d in restoratio­n work, including projects at the White House under six different U.S. presidents. Apfel’s celebrity clients included Estee Lauder and Greta Garbo.

Apfel’s own fame blew up in 2005 when the Metropolit­an Museum of Art’s Costume Institute in New York City hosted a show about her called “Rara Avis,” Latin for “rare bird.”

The museum described her style as “both witty and exuberantl­y idiosyncra­tic.

Her originalit­y is typically revealed in her mixing of high and low fashions — Dior haute couture with flea market finds, 19th-century ecclesiast­ical vestments with Dolce & Gabbana lizard trousers.” The museum said her “layered combinatio­ns” defied “aesthetic convention­s” and “even at their most extreme and baroque” represente­d a “boldly graphic modernity.”

Apfel was born in New York City to Samuel and Sadye Barrel. Her mother owned a boutique.

Apfel’s fame in her later years included appearance­s in ads for brands like M.A.C. cosmetics and Kate Spade. She also designed

a line of accessorie­s and jewelry for Home Shopping Network, collaborat­ed with H&M on a sold-out-in-minutes collection of brightly-colored apparel, jewelry and shoes, put out a makeup line with Ciaté London, an eyeglass collection with Zenni and partnered with Ruggable on floor coverings.

Apfel’s husband died in 2015. They had no children.

 ?? Getty Images file photo ?? Designer Iris Apfel in 2018 in New York City.
Getty Images file photo Designer Iris Apfel in 2018 in New York City.

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