Favorite Moments From Working in Fashion
“I’ve been in this industry for 20 years and have many spectacular memories. Also horrible ones. And plenty so hilariously bizarre that no one would believe they weren’t hallucinations. My most memorable, however, are the people I’ve met.
Betty Halbreich, who worked at Bergdorf Goodman for nearly 50 years, founded the Solutions personal-shopping department, and authored three books, was the quickest, wisest, most refreshingly pungent among them. She passed away on August 24 at 96 years old. I met Betty in her third-floor Bergdorf office while interviewing her for a profile in V Magazine. It was the first of many meetings in that office, during which we talked about fashion and how it’s changed, but also about the news, politics, writing, my pet rabbits, her abhorrence of the cardboard Amazon boxes perpetually piled in her lobby, whatever impossible conundrum I'd gotten myself into that week, her mother's appetite for knowledge and the book store she owned in Chicago.
While I was the fashion director of Off Duty at the Wall Street Journal, I interviewed Betty about a significant heirloom she’d received. She discussed her great-grandmother’s ostrich-feather and tortoise-shell fan, and how, when she was gone, she hoped someone would treasure it as much as she did. I was having major back surgery a few months later, and before I got my bionic steel spine, a big Bergdorf bag showed up at my apartment. Inside was an encouraging note from Betty and her great-grandmother’s fan. I framed the note and the fan. They now hang next to my bed. So, Betty is my favorite memory from working in the industry. And I hope that, someday, I can be ‘Betty’ for someone else.”