Fashion

13 Women Who Prove Fashion Gets Feminism Right

by Cherise Luter

Recently there has been a bit of confusion as to the true definition of feminism. Though many have weighed in already, may I suggest we look to the women of fashion for a little input?

A tense relationship between fashion and feminism has existed for decades. What a woman decides to wear on her back and what society can infer from her choice is a struggle across the board. Can a female CEO be taken seriously in ruffles? Can a woman wearing a pair of Louboutins stomp the election trail and win the presidency? Will sitting for Vogue magazine be a step backward for myself and female kind? After all, fashion is a frivolity meant only for those too vapid to care about more important things, right?

Um, no. Some of the most powerful women in the world, both in fashion and outside, unapologetically dress beautifully, care about style, and wield it as they see fit. Their right to do so fits perfectly within the feminist ideal of equal treatment and equal choice for all. Though many may think the fashion industry is partly responsible for the state of the world and the women working in fashion to be the Benedict Arnolds of the cause, the evidence shows that these women get it and are doing their part.

And to prove my point, I turn to the most powerful women in fashion, many of which may not self-identify as feminist, but definitely talk the talk.

They are what female empowerment looks like and they look good.

1. Tory Burch

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"My biggest challenge every day is to be a great mother and a great businesswoman."

And yes you can be both.

2. Diane von Furstenberg

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"I wanted to be an independent woman, a woman who could pay for her bills, a woman who could run her own life — and I became that woman."

Every woman can create the life she wants.

3. Tracy Reese

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"I'd like to be with an interesting man who is understanding about having a busy partner."

Find a partner who supports you as much as you support them.

4. Anne Klein

"Clothes aren't going to change the world. The women who wear them will."

(Linda Evangelista for Anne Klein)

Our power lies within, no matter what we wear on the outside.

5. Bethann Hardison

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"It’s about improving the majority, not trying to support the minority. That’s what it’s about for me...I’m not here to put anybody down. I’m here to bring everybody up."

Though Hardison works primarily for ethnic diversity in fashion, this quote still rings true for what feminism is really about.

6. Gisele Bundchen

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"I love that feeling of, you know, we are women, we are so different, our imperfections are what make us unique and beautiful."

Gisele has had more than a few gaffes, but here she gets it right.

7. Naomi Campbell

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"Am I bossy? Absolutely. I don't like to lose, and if I'm told 'no,' then I find another way to get my 'yes.'"

#banbossy... or maybe we just reclaim it.

8. Donna Karan

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"I've always been about the power of a woman - accentuating the positive, deleting the negative, whether you're talking her body, her voice or her leadership."

Amen!

9. Anna Wintour

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"The notion that a contemporary woman must look mannish in order to be taken seriously as a seeker of power is frankly dismaying."

Femininity and success are not mutually exclusive.

10. Coco Chanel

"The most courageous act is still to think for yourself. Aloud."

Your voice matters and should be heard.

11. Miuccia Prada

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"Basically I'm trying to make men more sensitive and women stronger."

Yaaasssss!

12. Phoebe Philo

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"The older I get, and the more collections I do, the more I'm driven by real style and beauty. My aim is to reveal and not to display women."

Clothing should accentuate, not put a woman on display.

13. Jenna Lyons

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty Images

"I don't think about it in terms of being a woman. Being gracious, attentive, curious, interested are requirements for everyone. As much as the people in this room are being honored for being a woman, I think what they’re being honored for is what they’ve done. I would look forward to the day when there's no differentiation. It’s about what you do."

Right on!

Images: Getty (10); lalinda-evangelista/Tumblr, lapitiedangereuse/Tumblr