tv Euromaxx - Lifestyle Europe Deutsche Welle January 3, 2019 1:30am-2:00am CET
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we may come over as we watch as old as the under section five we are the civil service or. the want to shoot the continent's future or to. be tortured and killed for the youngsters mostly share their stories their dreams and their challengers. the seventy seven percent of the platform for the charge. in. rome has so many fascinating things to discover. the video kentucky is near the famous spanish steps it's one of the top shopping
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streets in the eternal city and that's where i'm headed to meet up with another top european lifestyle and culture celebrity. everyone to welcome to this very special edition of your own max coming to you from the italian capital rome we have a very special guest on our show today the italian fashion designer. let's go inside and say hi. and here she is our very special guest and co-host today love you know visuality thank you so much for having us in your beautiful home or in the middle row thank you so much for coming today i was looking so much for it to this special day we do yes and we're looking forward to you helped us put the show together today so we're going to be taking a look at some of the reports that are important to you all right but the first question i'm sure many of our viewers would like to know what are you wearing today what i'm wearing something from our whole winter eighteen nineteen. and it's
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supreme which english rules us and my mom for so it keeps her always on my heart and you have any favorite fashion accessories well i'm crazy about passion and i believe that passion is to be an i either out to close or. to have to make you feel better right now i'm crazy for this is my belt moment makes me share more feminine and female you just mentioned your mother you know you've grown up in the cradle of fashion your mother was the famous fashion designer. and she was also a pioneer in the fashion world so for you is her daughter was there really any other option career option for you well first of all i was so blessed to be my mother and my father son daughter they were an amazing amazing parents and never felt they were v.a.p. they were so special to me and they were always caring for the people of pings which i think you so important in life and they let me free to decide to do whatever i wanted in my life but then i chose fashion so what is
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a day in the life of love like well i think in the countryside that's where we are at court so i wake up in the green in the morning pretty early i take a walk me with my dogs and my cats i believe you know having a relationship with nature keeps you calm and keeps you create balance is your energy and then i start to you know going crazy with my two phone ninety one e-mails and phone calls and i drive my golf cart to the young base and i mean they're about ten hours. a day for me and i'm in the fashion business sports business our business and i work with amazing people so to be fair i do enjoy most of the time i spend in the office and then i go back home and all kind of have dinner with food from the kountry side and i love to watch movies they're very inspiring for me and read books i do and don't sleep much to spend a lot of my spare time in the night. all right now loving you took over the
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business of from her mother after mother passed away in may of two thousand and seventeen and since then she's been working to keep the label and the collections are moving forward we want to take a closer look now at our hosts today. the designs are elegant and casual glamorous and romantically feminine. ruffles and the color white play a major part in any fashion show including the first collection by love. in twenty seventeen. accessories and a lot of applications on fabrics are real eye catching. the show was a tribute to lauer who died in may twenty seventeen her daughter lavinia wore her mother's dressmaking shears on a ribbon around the word mom on her heart. and
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lauer and levene he had worked side by side for over twenty years. introduced her only daughter to the runway at the age of four and learned the business. in the one nine hundred seventy s. be a judge he became known as the queen of kashmir with her wall and cashmere designs mostly in white. top models like claudia schiffer naomi campbell and cindy crawford did catwalk shows for be a jockey in the one nine hundred eighty s. and ninety's was never out to reinvent fashion. fine fabrics and design is not limited to women with a model's figure her classic pieces never go out of style to this day silk and kashmir are lauer staples as seen here at one of her last shows. the company headquarters is the family owned. about twenty cologne. it's from rome
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and surrounded by the company's own golf course. as a child. played golf here with her mother and father johnny. she died when i was just seventeen she grew up in the low and lives and works here to this day. golfing is her great passion in twenty twenty two the course is to stage the famous ryder cup competition. the lowry the flagship store is in downtown rome near the spanish steps the new boutique with two and a half floors of selling space opened in late. accessories like handbags and jewelry are also popular. but the greatest share of revenue comes from the famous be a person's. long will be a jockey created in one nine hundred eighty eight. the fact comes design is
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a homage to her hometown roma remains one of the biggest selling person in the world. lance piccolo teo afro has hosted the adjoint the fashion shows for twenty years. lavinia be a jockey continues in this tradition and will keep using this special venue to present her creations. and now reno has invited me to take a quick look around the new shop that bears her late mother's name. we're now in the flagship store for. just a few metres away from the house or visuality how's it been for you love you know to fill in your mother's footsteps well it was. amazing to be my parents' daughter
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because i learned so much from them since i was a child and i traveled around the world i went to china japan america russia before day age of ten so it really tried to going to pass as they could because they knew at some point in my life had to take over the company. it was amazing to work with her we exchanged our roles we were like you know to soccer players to play in the areas in the playground so she passed away all of us had. no expectations she was doing great until five minutes before where you were pushed into the driver's seat pretty suddenly aside from your mother who would you say are your role models while i have so many inspired by women by women and power by women most simple who can balance family and work i think that's a greatest power that women can achieve is not just sitting on boards or you know becoming famous pretty sense but handling you know your personal life and your success i think that's biggest achievement in life where your mother and your
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grandmother were real pioneers in the fashion industry your mother back in the seventy's your grandmother before that. that was back then what is it how is it now for women in the fashion industry particularly here in italy today if you look at the fashion industry or not so many women really leading roles which sounds quite unusual because you would say that you know a mother is a female's world but still we have to compete in every other field i was lucky enough to be inspired by leading women like my grandmother and my mother but this is not as easy for me and generation you know i would just try to be true to myself i'm not looking at people if their main are female and i believe in energy i believe in being able of you know carrying on your job feeling of energy you're also sponsoring one of the biggest golf tournaments in the world and the ryder cup how did that come about well we're actually hosting there either cup with marco.
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money which is another adventure may live in it's a beautiful thirty six holes golf course that my parents built in the ninety's and at some point four years ago i decided to manage it because a figured out golf could shared so many values and you know adding more and bring to our country was very important you know giving a legacy to children that's my you know because because commitment so you tell it was beating toaster either cup against germany or in spain and then we won after eighteen months of you know bidding and now we're delivering there at the cup in twenty twenty two i'm very excited huge for my continent suits from a business especially something to look forward to we want to take a look at the city you call home in the city that your family has remained so loyal to rome let's have a closer look. a walk through rome is like a visit to a vast open air museum of three thousand years of history. millions
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of tourists come to the eternal city every year. to marbella famous landmarks like the pantheon with the world's largest under a enforced concrete dome. and michelangelo's piazza so del campi dalio. local resident christian serrano family enjoy showing tourists his city. here warm how to get here in rome we not only have stretches from antiquity but also quite a lot from the middle ages and from the renascence sources rome is a kind of historical xander because they always built on top up and next to the old rome everywhere you look you see different eras of. preserving it all is a never ending task and financing is an endless challenge to god or not to underwent restoration some thirty years ago funded by allow to be a job pioneer of fashion industry sponsorship.
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of the colosseum too is a bright and shiny as in its days of gladiator glory. its restoration was funded with twenty five million euros from italian leather goods label diego della valet. restorers are hard at work in the narrow streets of the old town. vanno family business stands woodcutting mosaics and gold plating. the father and two daughters have clients from all over the world and also carry out renovation work for the city of rome. that we carry enormous responsibility. when working on historical. we have to bring out the beauty of these are sad and preserve them without counted as low fat low. a good restoration lends additional value to not ticked
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while already in the heart of the old town yet on the beaten tourist track lies the piano naisi and its collapse are said to be one of rome's most beautiful renaissance buildings. but. here the locals come to enjoy frank first and read newspapers in the café. city guide christians around or likes to bring tourists here it's just a few steps from the famous campo de fury. yes i was here everything spoiled but over there there's so much commotion with all the pubs all the american students like to go there in. the wrong piazza navona is only this peaceful early in the morning the majestic fountain of the four rivers is one of rome's most photographed signs. of course locals will also end up in some
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holiday snapshots of rome is a city full of surprises sets archaeologist and tall guides define your dimaggio's . by appointing you know on that i discover something new in rome almost every day it's unbelievable you never get enough of wrong i always tell tourists that one lifetime is not enough to see all there is to see in rome. but we did it with the will of acceptable tourists and romans aligned can enjoy an evening stroll on the piazza navona. people come here to admire the fountains and their sculptures and water shops restaurants and cafes here are open late into the night. rome is also busy during the day as thousands of visit. take in its rich history.
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so back in the future of the house as we just saw in that last report the piazza navona is a super popular tourist destination but since you're a true roman what place would you recommend for a tourist to experience the real world well never have enough or grown i love my seeking so much so i'd like to be a tourist forever in my seat and i still get lost some kind because you know the center of the city is so. so mazing and every time i look out i see in the paper that i've missed you know it in my previous four so one of my favorite part is they cut the cutting square where we stored that's how i put it down out i designed by michelangelo and there are a few secrets in that that player actually can walk through this player behind the beautiful statue of marcus so radius so you can see a wonderful terrace on the forum sometimes you know walking through the farms is very crowded you can just go on the terrace which is right behind the statue and you can get one of the most beautiful c. students of the farm and they're going to see you and then you can walk back to
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them so they could be coding in which they're not so seen and you can find some amazing pieces in there now venice is also a huge tourist magni and also we see that your family is closely connected with why is that i love that it's so much i used to live there indication when i was a child with my grandparents my parents and it was like being in a theater a little man you know they got in the labs and the water and the car are so amazing and inspiring for me i think the water is a very creative element because it moves things and he keeps and different perspective and i like the museum and i love the ancient part and without the contemporary art my house and then he says close to the guggenheim museum and every time i go and visit it i take some great inspiration back with me and want to turn our attention a little bit too. fabrics you know venice is well known for the art of silk and velvet weaving which dates back centuries but when you look at to date how hard or easy is it for you to find good seamstresses well i would share
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a secret with you when i lost my mother seventeen the first thing i did was hire a new seamstresses because i believe they needed patents you know he's made a great he's made of numbers it's made of marketing and managers but most of all is made of hands it's made of everybody's work is made of stitching so i found three amazing women in rome and i had them immediately and that made me feel stronger and gave me the chance to share. now in terms of fabrics where do you normally go shopping for your fabrics for the clothes well you do buy and mainly kind of fabrics but as you know my mother was the first time in this manner to do a fashion show in china in one thousand nine hundred eight was very early but then you know not everybody goes to china even for a week and by the one thing i think it was early and she was invited by the minister of culture so we do still buy a lot of kashmir from china to new york times named the queen of kashmir because
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she had the new contemporary approach and i love kashmir because it's great for a woman that is sort of traveling like me and where they kind of in the evening. now venice so supply for centuries of clothing and fabrics for no woman and churchmen alike we want to take a look at some of the factories that still remain today. as the tourists who flock to venice normally come to see the most famous sights. but there are quieter corners where you will find venetians displaying centuries old handicrafts . some of the small shops around the callow deliberate take house genuine treasures . damask and hand printed fabrics. and usual accessories made of costly hand-woven scraps.
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they were barely weavers keep an archive of historical fabrics. date back to the golden age of silk weaving in sixteenth century venice. the luigi bevilacqua we even give some idea of what it must've looked like back then. they were at three hundred year old pedal driven. the exclusive velvets can only be achieved by hand at the race of about thirty centimeters a day. they're sent all over the world gracing interiors from the white house to the kremlin in moscow. and fashion designers turn them into. the women here are weaving red silk to be used in the restoration of the royal palace interest in. what's known as. it was invented here in venice. it's made up of several
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layers of fabric to create a ready flank in fact. and at the same time with changing colors. another hidden treasure is the highlights of her tonight now a museum in what was the private residence of spanish textile artist and art nouveau painter marianna foote to me from eight hundred ninety two. he also developed new photography techniques and design stage sets having fifty inventions patented including printing processes that remain a trade secret to this day. mariano fortini gained fame for his process for producing as shipley say. his wife henrietta used it in the early twentieth century to create the iconic delphos gown.
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the production was done on a cylindrical roller to make that out that not only gave the fabric its a vertical aplysia plates. but also its horizontal crimping. that a lens in the dress greater allure. only a few steps further on is the last in each opera one of the world's finest opera houses it took several years of work to repair the damage caused by a major fire in one thousand nine hundred six the gold plated decoration in the rico theatre hall is true to the original. even the exquisite curtain is a perfect copy of the original it was recreated by the b.s. forty fashion house and donated to the opera to the delight of tourists and venetians alike. so as we heard in the last report your family made
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a fairly large donation gift to the city of venice tell us more about that relationship but as i told you before we are. such a beautiful city and at the same time it's so for a dial and i feel as any talian that have to protect somehow so going back to did a nation in one thousand and six my father passed away unfortunately was amazing and young it was only fifty nine and that's the same year when they tear their life in each i was born left each of belongs to the world everybody has been i mean everybody went to venice in that wonderful place so a mother and i decided to donate the card because we believe that's a wonderful sign of life when the curtain goes up that shows starts you know the shows begins the magic comes to you and the energy so we figured out that was a way to keep life carrying on. now you said you're a huge found. of the theatre and the genre in particular well i love italian opera i love music in general it's so inspiring for me and so i do need emotions to be creative being creative you know in the stage and since your family is so connected
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to the theater do you also get inspiration from the costumes that you might even see in venice especially because they are known for their balls and the costumes well i'm fascinated like a child you know we go to the courts and i said oh not that much time to go but i love to watch it on you tube sometimes as well when in the some wonderful play and fascinated like a child by the amazing work we spoke about seems stern says and there are so much you know so much details behind a future costume and it's very interesting for me to look at now if you weren't a fashion designer and busy ten hour working days in if you were to slip into a role on the theater this stage where would it be well first of all they could never be a scene very so bad at me but i do love to dance take dance lessons that's one of my secrets and it helps me to feel balance with my body and my mind but in not definitely a classical dancer what kind of dance you. know you know i
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was told when i was a child i want to become a classical dancer at some point as every little girl but i was never you know the right size and the right to you know kind of break them ok you know back to reality is that i'm from slipping into different roles looking at your brand and roma perfume and just celebrated a milestone thirty years as you look at the entire company and the brand as a whole where would you like to see it heading in the next thirty years but i'm really happy to share with you our thirtieth anniversary. that's an amazing achievement to see you said it's a milestone if you think the average life of a fragrance right now on the market is from eighteen to twenty four months so you know being loved by many. women all around the world from thirty years it's a great great achievement now what do i want to do with my company well the company was founded by my grandmother in rome but we are right now in one thousand nine hundred sixty five so i've got an amazing erika's me on my shoulders and i want to
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do what she did and what my mom the it is making women and men all around the world feeling more confident more conscious i think fashion i hate the word fashion victim why just to be a victim of the fashion i think fashion is to be an ally so my every day goal is to share beauty and to share braveness and kharaj sounds like a very good go about living you know we thank you so much for having us here and be sure to house in rome and for hosting us. and with that we have come to the end of the show as always you can keep up with us on social media facebook and instagram for me and the rest of the crew here and from vigilante thank you so much for tuning in we're seeing and seeing.
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