Donna Karan quotes:

+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
  • Originally, back in 1992, DKNY started because I couldn't find a pair of jeans. I also wanted to dress my teenage daughter Gabby. So it was the perfect street wardrobe: jeans, anoraks, jumpsuits, boyfriend jackets, sweaters, skirts and dresses. Then DKNY grew into an entire lifestyle concept, including tailored clothes you wear to work.

  • I've always been about the power of a woman - accentuating the positive, deleting the negative, whether you're talking her body, her voice or her leadership.

  • I love skiing, I love the sun, I love my children, I love my grandchildren, I love my family and friends... and whatever I haven't done.

  • Evening is a time of real experimentation. You never want to look the same way.

  • I love building spaces: architecture, furniture, all of it, probably more than fashion. The development procedure is more tactile. It's about space and form and it's something you can share with other people.

  • Delete the negative; accentuate the positive!

  • I design from instinct. It's the only way I know how to live. What feels good. What feels right. What is needed. Give me a problem and I will approach it creatively, from my gut.

  • My mother was a working woman, and I was alone a lot. So I wanted to be a stay-at-home mom.

  • Everything in life... has to have balance.

  • Everything I do is a matter of heart, body and soul.

  • It's really easy to get colors right. It's really hard to get black - and neutrals - right. Black is certainly a color but it's also an illusion.

  • Design and style should work toward making you look good and feel good without a lot of effort so you can get on with the things that matter.

  • Today, fashion is really about sensuality-how a woman feels on the inside. In the '80s women used suits with exaggerated shoulders and waists to make a strong impression. Women are now more comfortable with themselves and their bodies-they no longer feel the need to hide behind their clothes.

  • I give Reiki, which is energy, but I don't tell too many people that.

  • I'm truly, truly boring! I don't change. If people know me, I have not changed.

  • To me, design and style should work toward making you look good and feel good without a lot of effort - so you can get on with the things that matter.

  • I start my day with a mind, body, soul practice - yoga, Pilates or meditation.

  • We've come a long way. Power dressing now is designed to let the woman inside us come through.

  • Accent your positive and delete your negative.

  • If I weren't doing what I'm doing today... I'd be traveling around the world on the back of a motorcycle.

  • It used to be only yoga, but now I do Pilates as well; I feel like I need the balance.

  • I really feel that we need to scale back and get to what is important on so many levels.

  • My daughter Gabby very kindly once said that she thinks I was a better mother because I was doing a job I loved. I now think guilt is a universal part of being a mother. I used to think it was Jewish-mother guilt but now I think it is working-mother guilt.

  • I believe in comfort. If you don't feel comfortable in your clothes, it's hard to think of anything else.

  • I love to play, I love to dance, I love to party . . . I'm a liver. I think what I need to learn is how to find the calmness, the centeredness.

  • Age and size are only numbers. It's the attitude you bring to clothes that make the difference.

  • When I started Donna Karan, people weren't really accepting the idea of the working woman.

  • Women should always take care of themselves first. It makes you more equipped to take care of others.

  • Business, numbers, negotiations, all that stuff I wouldn't go near.

  • I wouldn't be who I am without my husband, who handled the business end of Donna Karan so I could be creative.

  • I couldn't live without something that touches my heart. No one should.

  • Everything I do is a matter of heart, body and soul. For me, designing is an expression of who I am as a woman, with all the complications, feelings and emotions.

  • Fragrance is the first layer of dressing, a woman's invisible body suit.

  • My New Years Resolution is to find the calm in the chaos. Practicing yoga is one of the greatest gifts you can give yourself. It's where you connect mind, body and spirit.

  • Scheduling me is not easy, as most people know, because once I start, I don't stop.

  • My spiritual connection is about embracing everything around me. We're all the same. There are no boundaries . . .

  • I always thought I should have been a better mother.

  • I think I was a nomad in another life.

  • Design is a constant challenge to balance comfort with luxe, the practical with the desirable.

  • Basically, I was a hippie and still am a flower child.

  • I always thought what you wore underneath was as important as what you wear on top.

  • Every woman has the power to seduce the world with her uniqueness, passion and creativity.

  • I believe in the power of women. As nurturers, we have a unique ability to care and share and make the world a better place. Women Who Inspire are women who are making a difference.

  • I meditate whenever I can. I can be in the back seat of a car or in between appointments.

  • The most important thing any woman can do is promote her inner well-being

  • I must say that the more you give, the more you get. Being able to find solutions, to help other people is extremely gratifying.

  • Personal Style comes from within. It's when the woman, her individuality and spirit come through. She uses clothes to express who she is and how she feels

  • Many of the customers here are traveling all over the world so they need multiple types of clothes. That's one thing about Urban Zen - it is seasonless and it is timeless. So it's not about the fashion of a moment saying, "I have to have it now." It's something that you become a part of...sort of like a sari.

  • I never see one woman when I design, it's always a universe of women

  • Women are now more comfortable with themselves and their bodies-they no longer feel the need to hide behind their clothes.

  • Its really easy to get colors right. Its really hard to get black - and neutrals - right. Black is certainly a color but its also an illusion.

  • [The consumer] shown new styles in the moment, but she's not going to get them for another six months - and I think that's very confusing for her. She feels she's seen it all by the time it comes around. She's also a little bored. She's really into [snaps her fingers],"Wear-now-buy-now."

  • A fashion victim is dressed in designer clothes from top to bottom.

  • My bodysuit is how I start everyday. I wear a bodysuit everyday of my life. It's how I start my yoga practice. It's underneath it all. For me, what goes under the clothes is as important as what goes on top of the clothes. It's a layering aspect, so it's inside.

  • My favorite journey is anywhere I haven't been

  • I think it's changing is that business is not as good as it was and it has become a real question in the world of fashion. You see, bags and shoes don't take on the seasonal quality that fashion does. A black leather bag can be good in any season, but you can't say the same about fashion, particularly about fabrication.

  • I always need a support team, even at Donna Karan. I like collaborating. There is something in collaboration that is wonderful.

  • Pasta is my favorite comfort food, but sometimes my body really wants a steak, and I'll have one.

  • Every problem has a creative solution.

  • One of our greatest gifts is out intuition. It is a sixth sense we all have - we just need to learn to tap into and trust it.

  • I'd rather promote New York than anything else in this world because New York to me means the world.

  • Sometimes it takes a germ of an idea, which takes a long time to digest.

  • When you grow a business, it belongs to a lot of other people besides you. As much as you want to control it, the minute you go public, it becomes a business . . .

  • My biggest faux pas is not giving time for myself.

  • There was a time when we would pick up Women's Wear Daily and couldn't wait to see what it read. And now, you get it five minutes later on your iPad or your phone! The same has to apply to fashion.

  • I feel very strongly about dresses on every level - a dress feels like underpinning.

  • Now the industry is looking at the change in a very real way - to find ways of talking to the consumer much faster. Everything we have is changing with communication - from fashion to newspapers.

  • I also miss the support that I had of so many people. You know I'm a very Ma and Pa operation right now, and I was used to having everything working for me. It was a similar situation when I left Anne Klein and started Donna Karan. All of a sudden I was working in my apartment and it was, "Oh my god, what am I doing?"

  • Where there is creativity, there is hope.

  • My biggest style regret is that I can't fit into the models' clothes.

  • I like the idea of having many different ways to express myself. There is a part of me as an artist and a creator who would like to express myself in many different ways. But then at the same time I know I have limited hours in the day, and I can only do so much successfully.

  • I realized I needed to address people, not just dress them.

  • I truly believe that philanthropy and commerce can work together.

  • I look in my closet, and if I need it, I design it.

  • For me, starting each collection is always about what I really want, what I really need, and I was personally dying for sensual comfort. I think when you think of Donna Karan, you think of sensuality, but it's a different kind of sensuality. A kind of comfort sensuality that is one with your body and the way clothes feel on.

  • Everything comes out of what works for me.

  • I can't tell you how much I appreciate these young [Israeli] designers. There's too much strife in the world. If we become united in our creativity, not only in what we wear, but what we do, we will change the world. It's truly an honor to be around such inspiration.

  • Just take a breath and see what happens.

  • I worked with a writer, Kathleen Boyce. It was a wonderful experience...but I didn't expect that the last chapter would be the last chapter of Donna Karan. That was probably the biggest shock.

  • Smell is the primordial sense, more powerful, more primitive, more intimately tied to our memories and emotions than any other. A scent can trigger spiritual, emotional or physical peace and stimulate healing and wellness.

  • You know the bodysuit that I built my line on? . . .That was about me being able to go directly from work to yoga class. It just wasn't as accepted to talk about then.

  • I celebrate my people a lot and that's why people stay with me as long as they do.

  • Its all about finding the calm in the chaos.

  • I'm not as obsessive-compulsive about certain things; I give a lot of latitude to people and support people. I know that I can't do it myself and that you're only as good as the people you have behind you.

  • You have to keep your eyes and heart open -- there are always new things to discover, new problems to solve.

  • I wanted to create something that would live on forever, beyond my time, and out of that came Cashmere Mist.

  • With all the yoga and meditation that I do, when the chaos happens it happens. But I'm not as affected as a lot of people - I don't react as much. I just let things drip off my back a little bit.

  • Where there is creativity there is hope and Haiti is the most hopeful place I've experienced

  • Every time I see the sunshine in the bright blue sky, I cannot help but think how blessed I really am to see another day. There are so many who may have not woken up to see it but I have been blessed.

  • I feel at home most places I go, but my very top of the list are Bali, Italy, and London. Those are like second homes to me.

  • The magic happens in the creative studios. But sometimes you're inspired when you're removed from it a little bit. That's when the juice starts to percolate.

  • I couldn't stand the fact that anybody else was dressing like me. It was supposed to be for me and my friends, not my daughter and her friends!

  • You don't have that much choice in your life, which is one of the big lessons I've learned. I was going to be a designer whether I wanted to be a designer or not. So there I was.

  • For me, the soul is connected to a higher being. It's not about religion; it's about connecting to your true self - your truth, the truth inside of you, the one you were born with.

  • Usually I do a practice in the morning first and then meditate. I'm fortunate that I can do it in a car, in a bus, in a plane.

  • Wellness is a state of mind, body, and spirit. When the three are in alignment, you feel balanced and energized. You have more to give of yourself creatively and to your loved ones. That's what we all strive for.

  • I could go on for days about why I love yoga. One of my favorite parts is I can't think about anything else other than doing what the teacher tells me to do. For me, someone who has a million things going on at any given moment, that kind of surrender is liberating. I also learn so much about myself - my limitations, my potential, how to be mindful of an injury.

  • I've been meditating as part of my yoga practice for so long, I can't remember when I started.

  • My mind is always racing with ideas or things I should be doing.

  • Meditation is the calm in the chaos, the fastest way to settle down and get in touch with the stillness within.

  • When I see a non-yogi [benefit], that's when it really affects my life.

  • I have tried to hold my philanthropic passion to fashion, because I think this is very important, and I realize I need to delve even deeper into it.

  • You look at the world situation, look at London, Paris, Italy, it is all basically the same as the U.S. Then you look at other places such as India, Bali, with warmer climates, you know the Southern climates, they are very different. I think there is a time and place for everything and in Australia, for example, it is completely the opposite. I don't think we can be designing for that customer per se.

  • When I came to Delhi first and said, "This is not India. And then I was taken to Varanasi and there I loved, loved the culture. It was a beautiful journey. The way the people dressed - even the poorest people, and the fabrics! With vegetable dyes, and I was fascinated by the color.But in the end I loved the men - all in white - so many shades of white. And I said, "What am I going to do? A color collection or a white collection?" I finally did a neutral white collection.

  • When I go to Bali, when I come to India and travel and see different cultures. I make sure I'm involved in the world out there, creatively, culturally.

  • I think Calvin [Klein] is a minimalist.

  • I'm more eclectic.Maybe I'm minimalist in the respect that I love black...black for the winter, white for the summer, you know? But I love artisanal things.

  • That's a journey I've been on for many years. I mean, being a working mother, realizing that I have to make and find my balance.

  • I've been away and haven't seen my family. I speak to them every day though. I miss them, but I love traveling.

  • I was so overwhelmed by India when I first came - it still inspires me because I still go for the culture, I still go for the colors.

  • I would love to work with the artisans and take it to another dimension, the same way I did in Haiti.

  • I think we're on a journey....It was very easy to write about my past in my book, but writing about the present is all a new chapter. I hope that people find this journey fascinating, informative and educational.

  • I do remember how sexy my collection was after I first got involved with Stephan [Weiss]. That's one thing I don't have in my life now and...if anything, that's one thing I would love.

  • I love working in the markets, I love working with fabric. So I'm not that conditioned to one thing.

  • I don't feel burdened, but I do feel a little frustrated. Because I see the problem, and I can see the solution - but there are two strongly different points of view on this - like the Republicans and Democrats.

  • I think I was always inspired by seeing a problem, and finding a solution.

  • I sit quietly and repeat my mantra until I'm in a meditative state, taking it all in but not focusing on any one thing.

  • I practice yoga and take a steam-filled bath or shower. Then I sit quietly and review and prioritize my to-do list.

  • Assuming I'm home and don't have an event, I'll have a massage or I'll talk on the phone.

  • I love green juices, soups, and salads. I also love dark chocolate.

+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share