Teen Vogue got the chance to sit down for a chat with Nicole Richie and talk about her collaboration with Macy's, Impulse, teen style, and bad hair days. Check out what the designer had to share with the magazine!
Teen Vogue got the chance to sit down for a chat with Nicole Richie and
talk about her collection for Impulse, teen style, and bad hair
days. Speaking about the '70s-inspired line featuring some of her
signature boho glamour, Nicole says that, "When I was filming
Fashion Star, I had the opportunity to spend a lot of time with the
head Macy's buyers while working with the designers and having them
present their collections to Macy's. Listening to Macy's feedback —
what the customer was looking for, who the customer is — I got
extremely familiar with the brand. So when they approached me to do
the Impulse collection, I was first of all so honored, but I felt
that it was a great time to step into this and still have it be my
aesthetic."
"Still have it be very much me, very much my aesthetic, bring in
the jewel tones and work with some really great prints. We
developed some great kaleidoscope peacock prints, and you'll see
some cool Aztec prints that are actually a nod to the jewelry that
I do for House of Harlow. You'll see similarities, but this
collection is focused for the Macy's customer," Richie added.
On her style as a teen and how it changed since then, Nicole
told the magazine that Punky Brewester used to be her style icon.
"It wasn't when I was a teenager, but when I was about 7 or 8, I
was extremely excited about Punky Brewster. She was my style icon.
I would leave the house with a white sock and a black sock and then
a green shoe and a red shoe, and I thought I was killing it. I
thought it was the coolest thing ever."
"And then Clarissa Explains It All came out a little bit after, and
she again had that same kind of eclectic, crazy taste. My mom was
mortified. And then Reality Bites came out, and I think I kind of
went through that grunge phase. I was your typical girl, so I went
though every stage."
On her biggest fashion regret Richie reveals that, "I would say the
pictures that my mom has up of me in her house is the most
mortifying to me, because that's where I spend a lot of my time. So
it's constantly in my face, those pictures of me in these
ridiculous Punky Brewster-esque outfits. But you know what? There's
actually no moment where I'm just mortified because fashion is
fashion and everybody gets mortified. I make fun of my dad for his
crazy '70s commodore outfits and his giant Afro. Everybody goes
through it, that's what fashion is all about. It's important to
just have fun with it and look at every time as that time."
Talking to Teen Vogue, Nicole also shares her wardrobe secret
weapon. "For fall, I would say that a great go-to blazer a
must-have. I did one for the Impulse collection actually, and it
has embellished shoulders," she says.
The gorgeous designer also reveals some her tips for bad hair days.
"I have naturally curly hair. I have curly, curly, curly hair, and
I hated it growing up. All I wanted to do was be like my friends
and go to school with wet hair and let it dry naturally. That was
my dream, and it never happened for me. So I learned at a very
early age — I taught myself — how to blow dry and flat iron my hair
when I was like 10 or 11 years old because that's what I wanted to
do. Just through that I became really obsessed with hair and
obsessed with having that bad hair day and how to really conceal
it," she explains.
"I learned how to French braid, and I've been braiding forever. So
I'm a very good braider, which is kind of always my go-to for those
out of control, crazy hair days. Bobby pins are my best friend; I
never leave my house with out them. I figure you can always kind of
work it out. If you have enough bobby pins, you can fix your hair
in some sort of way. In the summer I wear a ton of headscarves. I
wear them at the beach because, like I said, I have naturally curly
hair, so me just Bo Derek-ing it out of the ocean is never
happening."
Her advice for wannabe designers? "Never give up. It is definitely
a hard business, but never give up. Go with your instincts, and
always be open to learning more. Listen to the buyers. Listen to
the customers because you have to be a businessperson as well as an
artist in this industry," she told Teen Vogue.
Photos courtesy of Teen Vogue


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