Who Said The Most Iconic Fashion And Style Quotes Ever?

2025-08-26 17:25:16 357

3 Answers

Brandon
Brandon
2025-08-29 01:07:07
If I had to pick a handful of people whose lines get replayed forever, I'd point to Coco Chanel, Yves Saint Laurent, Diana Vreeland, Bill Cunningham, and Iris Apfel. Chanel's 'Fashion fades, only style remains the same' and Yves's similar phrasing about style being eternal are like the foundations of fashion thinking. Vreeland brings glamour and cheek, Cunningham treats fashion as everyday survival gear, and Apfel champions fearless individuality with lines like 'More is more, less is a bore.' Those voices cover concept, confidence, practicality, and play — which is why their quotes keep showing up on T-shirts, in magazines, and on subway posters. Whenever I feel stuck, I pull a line from one of them and it usually nudges me back toward something that feels like me.
Lila
Lila
2025-08-29 05:13:15
I collect quotables on my phone and yeah, I have strong opinions about who gets called 'most iconic.' For straight-up, timeless clarity, Coco Chanel's line — 'Fashion fades, only style remains the same' — is the headline act. It’s short, punchy, and looks great on a coffee table book or a mug. But I also love the cleverness of Oscar Wilde: 'You can never be overdressed or overeducated.' It sounds cheeky, but it nudges you to treat dressing as a form of self-respect.

Streetwear circles and vintage shoppers often lean on a wider range, though. Vivienne Westwood's 'Buy less, choose well, make it last' has become a mantra for sustainable fashion advocates, while Tom Ford's 'Dressing well is a form of good manners' feels like a practical rule for interviews or first dates. And then there are the wildly quotable personalities like Iris Apfel and Bill Cunningham, whose lines remind you that fashion is both play and armor. Honestly, who said the single most iconic line depends on your vibe — classic, radical, eco-conscious, or ironic — but these names keep coming up in my feed and my wardrobe decisions. If you’re curating a mood board or a playlist of quotes, mix the historical designers with cultural commentators; it gives you context and attitude in one go.
Gavin
Gavin
2025-09-01 23:13:17
I've kept a little notebook of fashion quotes since my twenties, mostly scribbles on napkins and the occasional line I liked from a museum plaque. For me, the most iconic lines come from people who could condense an attitude into a sentence: Coco Chanel's 'Fashion fades, only style remains the same' still lands hard because it separates ephemeral trends from personal identity. Yves Saint Laurent said something similar — often quoted as 'Fashions fade, style is eternal' — and that echo between the two designers shows how powerful a single idea can become when it resonates across generations.

Beyond those two, other quotable folks keep popping into my head when I’m digging through vintage racks. Diana Vreeland's 'You don't have to be born beautiful to be absolutely gorgeous' is pure uplift; Bill Cunningham's 'Fashion is the armor to survive the reality of everyday life' captures why I sometimes choose a bold coat for a rough day; and Iris Apfel's 'More is more and less is a bore' is the battle cry for maximalists like me. Karl Lagerfeld's sassy line about sweatpants — 'Sweatpants are a sign of defeat. You lost control of your life so you bought some sweatpants' — always gets a laugh at parties and makes a point about presentation, even if I occasionally live in sweatpants.

If you want a quick reading list, track down old interviews and essays by these people or a collection like 'Diana Vreeland's' magazine pieces for the context behind the lines. Quotes stick because they combine personality with conviction; they tell you not just what to wear but how to think about wearing it. Lately I've been pinning my favorites where I can see them, and somehow they keep my wardrobe fun, which is the whole point, right?
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