WSJ. Magazine

Harper's Bazaar

Joanna Coles Has Fired Nine Cosmo Staffers; Kate Lanphear Is Definitely Leaving Elle

Joanna Coles told us she was "not going to muddle" with Cosmopolitan when she took over as editor in chief in September, but she clearly wasn't referring to staff changes.



Joanna Coles told us she was "not going to muddle" with Cosmopolitan when she took over as editor in chief in September, but she clearly wasn't referring to staff changes.

Coles has reportedly sacked nine members of the magazine's team, including seven on the editorial side and two from the photo department. And while she's hired British GQ's Paul Solomons as creative director and Marie Claire's Joyce Chang as executive editor, a litany of other positions have yet to be filled.

The departures leave Jessica Knoll as the magazine's only current senior editor. When the two first met at a staff meeting in September, Coles joked, "Kate [White] told me you're a rock star. But Kate's gone, so it doesn't matter now."

Over the last several months, the desks at New York's glossy fashion titles have operated more like a game of musical chairs than anything else. The latest departure in a round of shuffling that started in August sees Elle's style director Kate Lanphear leaving her position. It's unclear where she's headed next.

The revolving doors started spinning when Sally Singer was ousted as editor in chief of T Magazine at the end of August. She's now back at Vogue as the digital creative director and was replaced by former WSJ. Magazine editor Deborah Needleman in late September. Needleman took WSJ.'s creative director Patrick Li and fashion features director Whitney Vargas with her when she made the jump.

This week it was announced that stylist Joe McKenna would join T Magazine as fashion director at large. W's Maura Egan has joined T as features editor. Meanwhile, Alix Browne, T's deputy design editor, will head to W Magazine as features director.

Back at The Wall Street Journal, Needleman's deputy editor Ruth Altchek was named editorial director of the paper's weekend Off Duty section and WSJ. in mid-October. Harper's Bazaar executive editor Kristina O'Neill was brought in as editor of the magazine. Two senior members of Bazaar's accessories team, Kate Davidson Hudson and Stefania Allen, left shortly after O'Neill, but not to join her at WSJ. Bazaar's features director Anamaria Wilson also left in October for a position as vice president of global corporate communications at Michael Kors.

Bazaar held onto and promoted three key staffers: longtime senior fashion market editor Joanna Hillman was promoted to style director, Nicole Fritton was named fashion market and accessories director, and Elisa Lipsky-Karasz became the magazine's features editor.

Brides executive editor Anne Fulenwider replaced Coles as editor in chief of Marie Claire. Her first big staff changes have been to promote Nina Garcia from fashion director to creative director and to hire Alex Gonzalez as artistic director. Fulenwider was herself replaced by Keija Minor, becoming the first black editor in chief of a Condé Nast title.

Speaking of Condé Nast employees, Eva Chen left her position as beauty and health director at Teen Vogue and was replaced by Glamour's senior beauty editor Elaine Welteroth.

Above: Joanna Coles. Below: Kate Lanphear.

Link Time

Karl Lagerfeld's Taxes, Miss Dior's New Film, and the World's Largest Shoe Store

Those stories and more in our daily news roundup.



Those stories and more in our daily news roundup.

  • Karl Lagerfeld has called French President Francois Hollande an "idiot" for the new tax he's set on high-earning French citizens. "It's a disaster," he says. "He wants to punish (the rich) and of course they leave and no one invests." [Reuters]

  • Jennifer Lawrence may have been named the new face of Miss Dior, but she's still sharing the title with Marion Cotillard. The French actress has just finished a new episode of the brand's online documentary, called "Metamorphose." [Fashion Etc.]

  • The world's largest shoe store, a 96,000-square-foot Dubai retailer called the Level Shoe District, opened today. The store will stock up to 15,000 pairs of shoes from over 250 brands. [The Los Angeles Times]

  • Iris Apfel is adding shoes to her portfolio of products, which already includes handbags, makeup, and costume jewelry. [The Cut]

  • Just after Kristina O'Neill left Harper's Bazaar to join WSJ. Magazine, Harper's accessories director Kate Davidson Hudson and senior accessories editor Stefania Allen left, too. Whether their departure is related to O'Neill leaving remains to be seen. [Fashionista]
T Magazine

Who Will Join Deborah Needleman at T Magazine?

Newly appointed T Magazine editor Deborah Needleman is settling into her office at The New York Times, and she's bringing some of her old staff at WSJ.

Newly appointed T Magazine editor Deborah Needleman is settling into her office at The New York Times, and she's bringing some of her old staff at WSJ. with her.

Sources have confirmed to WWD that WSJ.'s creative director Patrick Li and fashion features director Whitney Vargas will join Needleman at T. Whether they will replace the magazine's current features director Jacob Brown and creative director David Sebbah remains to be seen.

Needleman had also reportedly been negotiating with the Times about her role before Sally Singer packed up her desk. Among her demands for the job were for T to have its own publisher, for printing of the magazine to be scaled back from 15 issues a year to 12, and to stop doing themed issues in favor of general interest issues that cover fashion and a range of other topics.

A spokeswoman for the Times wouldn't comment on these requests or the prospective new hires.

"It's her second day and she's focused on getting herself settled here. She's not ready to talk to the press and likely won't be for a while," the spokeswoman said. "Similarly, it's too early to talk about who might stay, who might go, who might join."

Be that as it may, Needleman told Daily Front Row before the Chanel show that she already has her first cover idea in the works — she's just keeping it a surprise.

T Magazine

Deborah Needleman Offered Editor Job at T Magazine — Twice

The New York Times has offered Deborah Needleman the editor's chair at T Magazine twice, according to reports, but no one knows for sure whether she'll accept.

The New York Times has offered Deborah Needleman the editor's chair at T Magazine twice, according to reports, but no one knows for sure whether she'll accept.

Needleman, currently editor of WSJ. Magazine, told WWD Wednesday that any suggestion she has taken the job "is just not true!" Needleman became an early frontrunner on the list of candidates to replace Sally Singer when her departure from T was announced in late August, but at the time Needleman seemed content to stay at WSJ. "I'm focusing on our Fall-Winter issues right now," she said.

That focus — and her success at WSJ. — are part of what makes Needleman so perfect for the job. The key question now is, will the third time really be the charm?

Marc Jacobs

Alber Elbaz Is Glad Designers Don't Hate Each Other Anymore

"There was a time when designers hated other designers," Alber Elbaz said in a recent interview with WSJ.



"There was a time when designers hated other designers," Alber Elbaz said in a recent interview with WSJ. Magazine. "But today there is actually major respect between many of us. We understand each other. We are all going through the same stressful process. Before shows we send each other little cards with congratulations; we send each other flowers. We're kind of a crazy family, but still a family. There are many designers I really respect and love. I love Azzedine (Alaïa). I like Narciso (Rodriguez) and Marc (Jacobs) and Nicolas (Ghesquiére) from Balenciaga. The first collection Raf Simons did for Dior was gorgeous. I'm not jealous of people — I'm only jealous of people who can eat and not gain weight. I respect talent. When I see talent and when I see a good person who comes with the talent, I melt."

Victoria Beckham

Victoria Beckham's New Project, Kate Upton's Vogue Debut, and Karlie Kloss's Free-Spirited Shoot

Those stories and more in our daily news roundup.



Those stories and more in our daily news roundup.

  • Versace will introduce a collection of one-of-a-kind jewelry pieces during its couture show at the Ritz Paris on Sunday. "Each individual ring from the collection is a work of art," said Donatella Versace. [Material World]

  • If rumors are to be believed, Victoria Beckham and Sarah Jessica Parker are in secret, preliminary talks about working on a clothing line together. [Grazia]

  • Band of Outsiders is currently staging a 60-hour men's fashion show, during which a model will live in a "small compartment built from cardboard boxes and wood planks adjacent to the window of an anonymous gallery in Paris." The model will change his outfit every 90 minutes. [Fashionista]

  • In the July/August 2012 issue of WSJ. Magazine, Marion Cotillard explains that "a good model is someone who will create a story with an image." [WSJ. Magazine]

  • Carlos Souza spends his days leading the global public relations team at Valentino, but his apartment is more Asian-inspired than Italian chic. "My home aesthetic is quite an eclectic one and is based on my many travels to far-out places on the globe. Oriental and far-East posts are a big source of inspiration." [Refinery29]

  • Kate Upton says she loves fashion — even if she's always photographed in bathing suits. "I'm from Florida, where your whole wardrobe is flip-flops, cutoffs, and bikinis. Now I enjoy fashion so much, but I don't think people realize it, because I'm always in a bikini!" [Vogue]

  • Karlie Kloss and Aline Weber are the cheeky stars of Free People's latest catalog. [The Cut]

Photo: Kate Upton photographed for Vogue July 2012 by Sebastian Kim.