
Loulou and Yves have fun with hats
Picture credit: Courtesy of de la Falaise family archive
If you are looking for a holiday gift to transport you to a magical world of Marrakech by way of New York and Paris, this is a book to inspire and to cherish. With so much fashion focus on the Seventies, here is the real deal: a lively text and a mass of photographs in this Rizzoli edition of Loulou de la Falaise, the Glamorous Romantic.

Loulou wearing a red coat
Picture credit: Jean-Francois Jaussaud
Natasha Fraser-Cavassoni has written the story of an upper class Anglo-Irish girl who played a bohemian rhapsody in the Paris fashion world.

Loulou in scarf, about to kiss Yves Saint Laurent
Picture credit: Pierre Boulat

Loulou on her wedding day to Klossowski in Paris, June 1977
Picture credit: Guy Marineau

Loulou
Picture credit: Guy Marineau

Natasha Fraser-Cavassoni, (left), and Ariel de Ravenel, (right), at the booksigning
Picture credit: Giulia Pizzini

Loulou’s bangles
When Loulou went to Paris and met the shy and introverted Yves, it was fashion love at first sight. Loulou brought to YSL colour, decoration, imagination and a hippy-deluxe glamour that balanced the haute-bourgeois side.

Loulou relaxing
Picture credit: Jean-Charles de Ravenel

Loulou with Yves
Picture credit: Guy Marineau
Although so many characters in the story have already passed away, I loved to see some of the original Loulou group gathered in London at the home of Terry and Jean de Gunzburg, where Loulou's husband, Thadée, their daughter Anna and wider family gathered to give the book a fine send off.
"When I was approached, it was on specific condition that the family agree,'' said de Ravenel.
It is rare to find in what looks like a coffee-table book, so much depth in both Ariel 's research into images - iconic or unknown - and Fraser-Cavassoni's text. That there is a quote from one of Loulou's friends or acquaintances in almost every paragraph makes the book seem more like a television documentary than a traditional literary work.

‘Loulou de la Falaise, the Glamorous Romantic’ cover
Picture credit: Rizzoli
But this is not a bad idea, especially since the book comes in the wake of two films about Yves Saint Laurent that both reduce Loulou and fellow muse Betty Catroux to fashion plates.

Natasha's Mother, Lady Antonia Fraser, and Loulou’s husband, Thadée Klossowski de Rola
Significantly, both contributors have British blood but are at home in Paris: Ariel with an English grandmother, Natasha as part of the Pakenham dynasty of writers, including her own mother, Antonia Fraser.
This off-kilter vision of Loulou includes her quick repartee. (When grandiose hostess Marie-Hélène de Rothschild applauded Loulou for cutting down on alcohol, Loulou's riposte was: "Apparently cocaine is wonderful for your liver!")
In the images, Loulou's main vice seems to be an ever-present cigarette - including her ecstatic pulling on a fag, eyes closed, as the book's cover. The images and text come with rather too many quotes from fashion friends, as in Grace Coddington saying: "You took one look at Loulou and gasped."
Yet this book offers, along with its cornucopia of images and comments, an upbeat feeling that Loulou de la Falaise was an asset to fashion and to womanhood, managing to keep her own quirky spirit to the end.
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