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Nicole Miller (born 1952) is an American fashion designer and businesswoman. Miller attended the Rhode Island School of Design where she earned a BFA in Apparel Design.〔("Profiles: Alumni: Nicole Miller" ) RISD.com. Retrieved February 23, 2011.〕 She studied for a year at L'Ecole de la Chambre Syndicale de la Couture Parisienne〔Ball, Aimee Lee, ("Thoroughly Modern Miller," ) New York, March 8, 1993, pgs. 41-42.〕 where she was trained to drape fabric and study the classical techniques of couture.〔Swimmer, Susan, "Nicole Miller," More, May 2009.〕 Miller described her Parisian training as "intense," but explained that it gave her training in fabric manipulation, which became a signature of her designs.〔 Miller's first shop opened in 1986 on Madison Avenue.〔 The brand has grown to 20 boutiques in major cities across the United States.〔Chaplin, Julia ("Our Lady of Fiestas" ), Elle, November 2010. Retrieved February 23, 2011.〕 and is sold in a number of high-end department stores. Miller designs an extensive collection for J.C. Penney and a home furnishing collection for Bed, Bath and Beyond.〔 Of her style, the designer has said: "I've always been downtown and uptown. I've had a lot of artist friends and I was always a little bit of a renegade."〔Johnson, Hilary, "A Fashionable Address," In Style, June 2000, p. 532〕 Her modern design aesthetic is known for its bright prints and patterns.〔("Designers: Nicole Miller" ), New York. Retrieved February 23, 2011.〕 ==Young life== Miller was born in Fort Worth, Texas, and raised in Lenox, Massachusetts. Her father and Parisian-born mother, met in World War II.〔 Her father was an engineer at General Electric. Her father was great influence on young Miller; she attributes her ability to make clothing to her father's engineer-like mind. Miller said: "The way you figure out how to make something is engineering."〔 Her mother, on the other hand, "hated" living in America and insisted dressing her daughters in a French-influenced style.〔 When Miller was asked by the Mattel toy company to design a Barbie doll, she claimed to have never owned a Barbie herself because her mother insisted that she and her sister play with French dolls.〔Lolla, Donna and Salkenstein, Jacklyn, "Barbie the Fashion Experience, Children's Museum of Indianapolis," December 19, 2009, pg. 2.〕 Since December 2009 Miller's Barbie has been featured in an ongoing exhibit, Barbie: The Fashion Experience, at the The Children's Museum of Indianapolis.〔("Barbie: The Fashion Experience" ) The Children's Museum of Indianapolis, Retrieved, February 27, 2011.〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Nicole Miller」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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