The one bio/about-me line Iris Apfel included on her Instagram reads “More is more & less is a bore.” With a signature style that always impressed, Iris Apfel truly embodied the joy of that ethos. She studied art and art history in school, started her career copywriting for a fashion magazine, built a successful textile and fabric reproduction business with her husband, and broke into modeling in her late nineties. She taught us that color can raise the dead, statement eyeglasses never go out of style, and that being thoroughly and unabashedly yourself is the only way to live, at any age. One day after celebrating her 102-and-a-half birthday (and noting that she was only 26 in half birthdays, owing to it being Leap Day), Iris Apfel took a final, feather boa-ed bow on this planet. Let’s raise a glass in multiple-bracelet-clad arms to a one of a kind spirit
If only every life could be as lavishly lived as Iris Apfel’s. The celebrated interior designer, entrepreneur and late-in-life fashion model died in Palm Beach on Friday, her representatives confirmed. She was 102 years old.
Born Iris Barrel in 1921, she was brought up in Queens, New York. The daughter of a successful small business owner, she studied art and art history before working as a copywriter for Women’s Wear Daily.
With her husband Carl, Apfel started a textile and fabric reproduction business in 1950. Her firm managed White House restoration projects for nine presidents, ranging from Harry Truman to Bill Clinton.
Known for her charisma and work ethic, Apfel’s distinctive style — the bushels of bracelets, the piles of necklaces, plus signature saucer-sized, heavy-framed glasses — helped propel her into late-in-life fashion celebrity, or a “geriatric starlet,” as she often referred to herself.
Apfel’s star only brightened as she aged. At 90, she was teaching at the University of Texas at Austin. At age 94, she was the subject of a well-reviewed documentary by Albert Maysles (Iris.) At age 97, she became a professional fashion model, represented by a top agency, IMG. She modeled for Vogue Italia, Kate Spade and M.A.C, and at the time of her passing, was the oldest person to have had a Barbie doll made by Mattel in her image.
A society grand dame who was not above selling scarves and jewelry on the Home Shopping Network, Apfel received a 2005 retrospective at the Costume Institute at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Rara Avis (Rare Bird): The Irreverent Iris Apfel was a first for the museum in showcasing clothes and accessories created by a living non-fashion designer.
Her autobiography, Iris Apfel: Accidental Icon, was published in 2018.
In a 2015 NPR story, Apfel told correspondent Ina Jaffee that she took pride in having inspired people over the years. She remembered meeting one woman who exclaimed that Apfel had changed her life.
“She said I learned that if I don’t have to dress like everybody else, I do not have to think like everybody else,” the designer recalled with glee. “And I thought, boy, if I could do that for a few people, I accomplished something.”
Her agent Lori Sale called the designer a “visionary.”
“She saw the world through a unique lens — one adorned with giant, distinctive spectacles that sat atop her nose. Through those lenses, she saw the world as a kaleidoscope of color, a canvas of patterns and prints. Her artistic eye transformed the mundane into the extraordinary and her ability to blend the unconventional with the elegant was nothing short of magical,” she said in a statement.
“She became a beacon for so many people,” jewelry designer Alexis Bittar said in a statement shared by Sale. “Through living her life on her own terms it messaged to women that they don’t need to hide in the shadows as they age, they actually can continue to glow and get better at what they do and look like.”
If you don’t have to dress like everybody else, you don’t have to think like everybody else. What a radical idea. I honestly can’t think of a higher honor or legacy than to have helped people come to that realization. While I knew of Iris’s deserving status as a fashion icon, I was impressed to learn about her fabric company with her husband, Old World Weavers, and their work on White House restorations. She is so cool! What a life well-lived. Iris, thank you for your inspiration — and I say that as someone who’s always donned vintage eyeglasses, believed patterns can and should be mixed, and enjoyed wearing so many rings at once it’s aired on the side of pirate. Rest in Pucci, dear soul.
Photos credit: Caroline Torem-Craig / Avalon, Wenn / Avalon, Zeppelin Photo / Avalon, Darla Khazei/PacificCoastNews / Avalon and via Instagram
What a life, what an icon, what an inspiration. Thank you Iris.
Dearest Iris, thanks for being so fabulous.
And thanks for donating your clothing collection to the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem so we can visit with fabulous memories of you
You will be misssed
She was an inspiration for us older fashionistas. I love that motto: “More is more & less is a bore.” Words to live by.
I do understand why she was a unique style icon.
However, she was also anti-Obama and very sympathetic towards Trump. Let’s not forget that.
And stated that anyone over a size 10 wearing jeans with stretch should be thrown in jail. She was horribly fat phobic.
While I loved her “fashion can be purchased, but style you possess” comment. I read a something by Frank DeCaro who knew her well. He basically said she was a race-baiting Trump supporter and no amount of style can dress that up. So I wonder, do we ignore that aspect of her life and simply celebrate her style?
This has nothing to do with politics. She was an amazing designer
@Dholmas, like it or not, politics affects everything. Iris Apfel was a huge style icon, but she was also on the wrong side of history politically and that’s worth pointing out. Both things can be true, and both things can co-exist.
People still celebrate Coco Chanel and she literally collaborated with Nazis. Hugo Boss too.
@rnot…Dont forget Dior who made Nazi uniforms to…as he said… keep the doors open
Yikes. 😬
I met her a few times several years ago. An amazing woman, you could see her mind working all the time, she could transform anything into fashion.
I met her a few times too at vintage clothing fairs where she was selling pieces from her collection and she was a pip! Always friendly and very comfortable in her skin.
May God bless her, and what she did for this Earth.
This was a nice write up. She lived an amazing life.
Iris was born in the 19th century and died in the 21st. Two world wars, the great depression, the airplane and the internet. She saw a lot, did a lot and said a lot. Nobody is perfect.
She was born in the 20th Century – 19th Century was 1800s. Now I am wondering if there is a person who was born in 1899 and died after 2000, so they would technically have lived in 3 centuries. What a feat to make it to 102 in any case.
A few years ago I watched a documentary about her. It was done by Albert Maysles when Iris was 93. I had never heard of her but I love documentaries in general, but especially when done by the Maysles brothers (shout out for “Grey Gardens”!!). It was streaming somewhere for free at the time so I watched and *thoroughly* enjoyed it.
A link to the trailer: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=eIG2AoiHszY
I’ll have to look for that, Grey Gardens was terrific.