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‘Queen of Knitwear’ Sonia Rykiel dies aged 86

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Sonia Rykiel, the French fashion designer known as the Queen of Knitwear, died on Thursday at the age of 86 after a long battle with Parkinson's disease, her daughter told AFP.

"My mother died at 5:00 this morning at her home in Paris from the effects of Parkinson's," Nathalie Rykiel said.

The pioneering Rykiel was a fixture in the industry for half a century, launching her own fashion house in 1968 buoyed by the Swinging Sixties craze in London and the emerging feminist movement.

Her easy-to-wear 'chic', iconic stripes and bright colours quickly came to typify a new generation of liberated women.

"She invented not just a style but an attitude, a way of living and being, and offered a freedom of movement," President Francois Hollande said in a tribute.

French fashion designer Sonia Rykiel (L)  seen here in 2010 with her daughter and fellow designer Na...
French fashion designer Sonia Rykiel (L), seen here in 2010 with her daughter and fellow designer Nathalie Rykiel
Patrick Kovarik, AFP/File

She had made her breakthrough in 1962 with the so-called Poor Boy Sweater, a garment designed for women that had long sleeves and a shorter, fitted shape.

The "Poor Boy" met resistance at first partly because of its bulky stitches.

But all that changed in December 1963 when Elle magazine featured the 19-year-old French pop idol Francoise Hardy on its front cover in a striped red-and-pink Rykiel number.

It became a sensation. Brigitte Bardot and fellow singer Sylvie Vartan were photographed in Rykiel sweaters and Andrey Hepburn herself went to the shop and snapped up five of them.

"She typified a new generation of designers who launched their own labels outside the established system of haute couture," her official website said.

Over the decades, she branched out into other branches of fashion, but always remained true to knitwear, with fluid, innovative shapes.

- 'La demode' -

Rykiel was born Sonia Flis in the upmarket Paris suburb of Neuilly on May 25, 1930 as the eldest of five daughters to a Romanian watchmaker father and a Russian mother.

She started out her career as a window dresser in a Parisian textile store at the age of 17, but had no formal training.

British model Edie Campbell (front) presents a creation for Sonia Rykiel at her autumn/winter ready-...
British model Edie Campbell (front) presents a creation for Sonia Rykiel at her autumn/winter ready-to-wear show in Paris in March
Martin Bureau, AFP/File

In 1954, she married a clothing boutique owner, Sam Rykiel, with whom she had two children and whom she later divorced.

She first publicly revealed she was suffering Parkinson's in a 2012 book.

Within the French fashion industry, Rykiel will be remembered as a visionary who helped cement Paris and, in particular, the Left Bank, as the capital of couture.

She described her philosophy as "la Demode", a contraction of "deconstruction" and "mode".

In 2008, 30 of the world's top designers paid tribute to the flame-haired knitwear queen at an exhibition marking her 40 years in the business, offering their own take on the Sonia Rykiel look.

Pioneering French designer Sonia Rykiel was a fixture in the fashion industry for half a century
Pioneering French designer Sonia Rykiel was a fixture in the fashion industry for half a century
Pierre Guillaud, AFP/File

"She abolished hemlines and linings, she invented knitwear, she made clothes that were reversible, she used layering," Olivier Saillard, who curated the retrospective of her work, said at the time.

She played herself in Robert Altman's 1994 satire "Pret-a-Porter" which was filmed during Paris fashion week, and wrote several books.

Sonia Rykiel, the French fashion designer known as the Queen of Knitwear, died on Thursday at the age of 86 after a long battle with Parkinson’s disease, her daughter told AFP.

“My mother died at 5:00 this morning at her home in Paris from the effects of Parkinson’s,” Nathalie Rykiel said.

The pioneering Rykiel was a fixture in the industry for half a century, launching her own fashion house in 1968 buoyed by the Swinging Sixties craze in London and the emerging feminist movement.

Her easy-to-wear ‘chic’, iconic stripes and bright colours quickly came to typify a new generation of liberated women.

“She invented not just a style but an attitude, a way of living and being, and offered a freedom of movement,” President Francois Hollande said in a tribute.

French fashion designer Sonia Rykiel (L)  seen here in 2010 with her daughter and fellow designer Na...

French fashion designer Sonia Rykiel (L), seen here in 2010 with her daughter and fellow designer Nathalie Rykiel
Patrick Kovarik, AFP/File

She had made her breakthrough in 1962 with the so-called Poor Boy Sweater, a garment designed for women that had long sleeves and a shorter, fitted shape.

The “Poor Boy” met resistance at first partly because of its bulky stitches.

But all that changed in December 1963 when Elle magazine featured the 19-year-old French pop idol Francoise Hardy on its front cover in a striped red-and-pink Rykiel number.

It became a sensation. Brigitte Bardot and fellow singer Sylvie Vartan were photographed in Rykiel sweaters and Andrey Hepburn herself went to the shop and snapped up five of them.

“She typified a new generation of designers who launched their own labels outside the established system of haute couture,” her official website said.

Over the decades, she branched out into other branches of fashion, but always remained true to knitwear, with fluid, innovative shapes.

– ‘La demode’ –

Rykiel was born Sonia Flis in the upmarket Paris suburb of Neuilly on May 25, 1930 as the eldest of five daughters to a Romanian watchmaker father and a Russian mother.

She started out her career as a window dresser in a Parisian textile store at the age of 17, but had no formal training.

British model Edie Campbell (front) presents a creation for Sonia Rykiel at her autumn/winter ready-...

British model Edie Campbell (front) presents a creation for Sonia Rykiel at her autumn/winter ready-to-wear show in Paris in March
Martin Bureau, AFP/File

In 1954, she married a clothing boutique owner, Sam Rykiel, with whom she had two children and whom she later divorced.

She first publicly revealed she was suffering Parkinson’s in a 2012 book.

Within the French fashion industry, Rykiel will be remembered as a visionary who helped cement Paris and, in particular, the Left Bank, as the capital of couture.

She described her philosophy as “la Demode”, a contraction of “deconstruction” and “mode”.

In 2008, 30 of the world’s top designers paid tribute to the flame-haired knitwear queen at an exhibition marking her 40 years in the business, offering their own take on the Sonia Rykiel look.

Pioneering French designer Sonia Rykiel was a fixture in the fashion industry for half a century

Pioneering French designer Sonia Rykiel was a fixture in the fashion industry for half a century
Pierre Guillaud, AFP/File

“She abolished hemlines and linings, she invented knitwear, she made clothes that were reversible, she used layering,” Olivier Saillard, who curated the retrospective of her work, said at the time.

She played herself in Robert Altman’s 1994 satire “Pret-a-Porter” which was filmed during Paris fashion week, and wrote several books.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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