Fashion
designer Laura Biagiotti, Italy's 'Queen of Cashmere'
dies
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[May 26, 2017]
By Philip Pullella
ROME (Reuters) - Laura
Biagiotti, who helped transform her mother's business
from a small tailoring shop in Rome to an
internationally recognized ready-to-wear fashion brand,
died on Friday aged 73, her family and company said.
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Biagiotti died in hospital in the Italian capital where she
had been in intensive care after a heart attack this week.
Born in 1943 at the height of World War Two, she studied
literature and had wanted to become an archaeologist.
Instead, she decided to help her mother, whose small atelier had
won a contract in 1964 for the flight attendant uniforms of
flagcarrier Alitalia and soon after was commissioned to produce
a collection for the U.S. market by Seventh Avenue group.
Biagiotti designed clothes for stars including Ingrid Bergman
and Bette Davis while working with stylist Emilio Federico
Schuberth in the heady fashion years of the 1960s. She first
presented her own ready-to-wear line in 1972 in Florence.
The business later opened its headquarters near Rome's Spanish
Steps, where many fashion houses have their showrooms.
She launched a menswear line in 1987 and showed her creations
using silk and cashmere in Beijing in 1988, when China was still
mostly closed to the outside world.
Biagiotti often took inspiration from the Far East, with some of
her most recent collections echoing Asian designs, and she
became known as the Queen of Cashmere for her frequent use of
that fabric.
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The Biagiotti brand, one of the earliest internationally
recognized fashion houses to be run by a woman, expanded to
include accessories, glasses, children's and home collections,
perfumes and sportswear.
In recent years, her daughter Lavinia, vice-chairman of the
Biagiotti group, had been running the company, which moved its
headquarters to a restored 11th century castle in the
countryside east of Rome.
The elder Biagiotti adopted many abandoned dogs and looked after
them in the castle's grounds.
In 2012, the company sponsored the restoration of the twin
Baroque fountains in Rome's Piazza Farnese, joining other
Italian fashion houses which have helped the cash-strapped
government spruce up decaying monuments and cultural sites.
(Additional reporting by Giulia Segreti in Milan; Editing by
Louise Ireland)
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