Clad in a flowing maxi-dress, sheer cardigan, bejeweled necklace (of her own design) and towering platform heels, Stephanie Lake positively glides through her Minnetonka home — despite the fact that her two excitable pug dogs and 2-year-old daughter, Odette, are constantly underfoot. With the recent publishing of her Rizzoli book "Bonnie Cashin: Chic Is Where You Find It," the house is bustling with more activity than ever.
The book, the first to be written about the highly influential American fashion designer, is an intimate, comprehensive overview featuring never-before-seen images from Cashin's personal collection and a foreword by designer Jonathan Adler. Glowing reviews from the Wall Street Journal, New York Times and the New York Journal of Books have followed.
Little known outside of fashion circles, Cashin was the original designer behind Coach's women's accessories, defining the brand's style and sensibility. But she was much more. Women's Wear Daily noted her "lasting influence on American sportswear," while i-D magazine has called her "one of fashion's greatest inventors and iconoclasts."
Lake is a jewelry designer with a doctorate in design. She and Cashin became unlikely friends in the late 1990s while Lake was a graduate student and research consultant for Sotheby's auction house in New York. It all began with a turquoise leather jacket designed by Cashin, which Lake was tasked to research. She called Cashin, then in her late 80s.
When the pair met, "we just clicked," Lake said. "Even though she was 60-odd years older than me, we were like sisters. She recognized something in me, and I listened to her."
When she realized no one had ever written a book on Cashin, Lake told the designer: " 'I want to redress the historical neglect of your career.' She sort of chuckled and said, 'That will take you years.' I didn't realize at the time that it would be a lifetime project," said Lake.
Nor did she realize that Cashin, upon her death in 2000, would leave her complete archive, as well as everything from her apartment, to Lake. While Lake's home is not a shrine to Cashin, you can't go more than a few steps without seeing something created or collected by the designer — an abstract self-portrait, sketches from her 1950s showroom, a sketch of a 1940s film costume.
Bonnie's story
For her dissertation, Lake chronicled the designer's career, beginning in the 1920s when a 16-year-old Cashin landed a job as costume designer for a troupe of showgirls under contract with West Coast impresarios Fanchon and Marco. In 1933, Fanchon and Marco took over the Roxy Theater in New York City, and Cashin became costume designer for the Roxyettes.