An heir to a fashion dynasty goes her own way. by Laurel Pinson
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Maybe as a result of the designer's sudden exposure, her fall 2007 collection, entitled "Alchemy," shows a certain edge: glossy black mini-dresses, skintight pants, and slick metallics are a nod to London glam rock, while short, architectural dresses later in the collection seem to be a send-up of Parisian couturiers. Jasmine's hard-earned sense of where to put a seam was evident in a Christian Dior-meets-Zac Posen black-and-nude dress, as well as a bursting yellow concoction whose endless folded edges played with the image of a lovely, giant fan.
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The dedication to seam and line also evident in her fall collection has been a continuous thread of her career, from choosing a name that merged hers with a symbol of everything sacred and feminine (Venus di Milo) to her decision to leave the London College of Fashion and DALI Central St. Martins in favor of the hands-on experience of apprenticing herself in the workrooms at Harrods. Sagely speaking as someone who's more than likely seen her fair share of fate's tricky hands and the short shelf-life of "cool," Jasmine's inspiration is "to achieve a feeling of timeless harmony in all our [work] and the belief that innovative design should be about more than just the pursuit of style."
Jasmine de Milo is available at Harrods online, www.harrods.com, in Los Angeles at Maxfield, 8825 Melrose Avenue, and in Paris at Montaigne Market, 57, Avenue Montaigne.
An heir to a fashion dynasty goes her own way.
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