This Article is From Oct 21, 2014

Oscar de la Renta, Fashion Designer, Dies at 82

Oscar de la Renta, Fashion Designer, Dies at 82

This image was posted on Facebook by Oscar de la Renta

New York:

Oscar de la Renta, the doyen of American fashion, whose career began in the 1950s in Franco's Spain and sprawled across the better living rooms of Paris and New York, and who was the last survivor of that generation of bold, all-seeing tastemakers, died on Monday at his home in Kent, Connecticut. He was 82.

His death was confirmed by his wife, Annette de la Renta.

Though ill with cancer intermittently for a decade, de la Renta was resilient. During that period, his business grew by 50 percent, to $150 million in sales, as his name became linked to celebrity events like the Oscars. Amy Adams, Sarah Jessica Parker and Penelope Cruz were among the stars who wore his dresses.

Recently his biggest coup was to make the ivory tulle gown that Amal Alamuddin wore to wed George Clooney in Venice.

Determined to stay relevant, de la Renta achieved fame in two distinct realms: as a couturier to rich socialites - the so-called ladies-who-lunch, his bread and butter - and as a red-carpet king. He also dressed four American first ladies, but it was Hollywood glitz, rather than nice uptown clothes, that defined him for a new age and a new customer. Just as astutely he embraced social media.
 

 

Oscar de la Renta recently designed Amal Clooney's wedding dress. This image was posted on Facebook by Oscar de la Renta

 

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