Karl lagerfeld gay
Lagerfeld — Difficult, Elitist, Entitled… and Talented
“Kaiser” Karl-Otto Lagerfeld, as he was recognizable, the biggest mention in fashion for half a century, died February 19 at the age of 85.
In terms of fashion influence, there was Yves Saint Laurent with his game-changing innovations, even Calvin Klein and Ralph Lauren, whose fabrics somehow became intrinsically woven into the fabric of people’s lives the earth over. A contemporary of Saint Laurent’s, whom he outlived, Lagerfeld was already an established eminence in the business before either of the latter two. And he kept on working until the day he died, at the top of his game.
He engineered a staggering 14 collections a year for various labels, including his have eponymous one, Fendi since 1967, and, most prominently, Chanel, which he took over in 1982, turning a dowdy, faded house recognizable for dressing wealthy matrons into a $4 billion juggernaut. Nobody had the overwhelming world grasp he possessed and for such an impressive length of time. In matters of style, for decades, he was simply “da Man,” and I will never forget the MTV Awards at which TLC’s sdelayed Lisa “Left Ey
Karl Lagerfeld Supports Gay Marriage on Runway
By Brittny Drye
As the debate over same-sex marriage heats up in France, the French fashion world is making their voices heard. Last week, Elle released their Marriage for All issue, which proudly featured two beautiful brides gracing the cover. On Tuesday morning, noted fashion artist Karl Lagerfeld added his couture stroke to the battle by closing Chanel’s Paris fashion reveal with two blushing brides, walking down the catwalk hand-in-hand, alongside Lagerfeld’s innocent nephew, four-year-old Hudson Kroenig (a frequent guest on Chanel runways).
Asked if his use of bridal couture at his show was planned to support male lover marriage in France, Lagerfeld replied: “Of course it was.”
“I don’t even grasp the debate. Since 1904 [in France] the church and state have been separate,” the German-born designer told The Associated Press. He said people who consider marriage a sacred religious union can continue that tradition in their churches, temples, synagogues and mosques, but that all religions should tolerate lgbtq+ marriage.”
However, Lagerf
Was Karl Lagerfeld gay, married, bisexual?
Karl Lagerfeld was undeniably one of the kings of fashion until his death in 2019, but who was he romantically involved with?
Karl Lagerfeld never officially came out as gay or bisexual person, but was apparently in a relationship with socialite Jacques de Bascher, until Jacques’ death in 1989 from complications from AIDS.
Both his mother and Jacque are buried in a chapel which is in the grounds of a home that Lagerfeld owned, although Lagerfeld reportedly stopped going there after their deaths. He sold the home in 2000.
Embed from Getty Images
Karl and Jacques had a very nearby relationship from the promptly 70s and were intimate for well over a decade.
The couple were never married, same-sex marriage was illegal in France until 2013.
Embed from Getty Images
Rather strangely Lagerfeld did express that he once wanted to marry his meower if it were legal. The cat was named Choupette.
In the past, the designer admitted employing the services of “high-class” escorts in an interview with Vice As a support to lgbtq+ marriage designer Karl Lagerfeld makes two brides walk the runway at the end of Chanel's Spring-Summer 2013 Haute-Couture collection exhibition held at Le Grand Palais in Paris, France on January 22, 2013.
Lagerfeld supports gay marriage in sapphic couture
PARIS - The Paired Press
He did that to cap Paris’ Grand Palais fashion show on Tuesday and also had a youthful nephew of his accompany the women models as they walked forward holding hands.
Francois Hollande plans to legalize gay marriage and thus allow same-sex couples to adopt and conceive children. But not everyone in France agrees that’s the way to depart . On Jan. 13, hundreds of thousands of people marched in Paris to oppose such a law.
Asked if his use of lesbian couture at his demonstrate was designed to support lgbtq+ marriage in France, Lagerfeld replied: "Of course it was."
"I don’t even understand the debate. Since 1904 (in France) the church and state have been separate," the German-born designer told The Associated Pre