![]() ![]() I’m the one who came to him, begged him.” It was something completely different from what I’ve been doing for the last 50 years, and it was a big changing point in my life to actually look to other things,” she continued. “It’s something I never really considered and didn’t know anything about,” Coddington explained yesterday, when Interview met with her, Comme des Garçons president Adrian Joffe, and Comme des Garçons Parfum creative director Christian Astuguevieille, at Rose Bakery in Dover Street Market’s New York outpost. The first of her labors outside the magazine (she’s signed with Matthew Moneypenny’s creative uber-agency Great Bowery, and a film adaption of her 2012 memoir, Grace, is on the way), is the fragrance Grace by Grace Coddington, created in collaboration with Comme des Garçons Parfum. Now Vogue‘s creative director-at-large, the ever-prolific septuagenarian isn’t slowing down. Her indelible appearance in the 2009 documentary, The September Issue crystallized her as not just an industry hero, but a hopeless romantic and a bona fide fashion celebrity. In January, Grace Coddington, the much-adored, visionary stylist and longtime creative director of Vogue announced she would be downsizing her role at the Condé Nast publication. ![]()
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