Jil Sander fashion house Sander founded her own fashion house
Jil Sander in
Rotherbaum,
Hamburg, Germany in 1968 with her mother's sewing machine. Her first collection was for
Hoechst, a chemical company, using their
trevira fabric. In 1973, she launched a collection under her own brand name. Her debut at Paris Fashion Week in 1975 was unsuccessful: the public, accustomed to bright and shocking images, coldly greeted her restrained minimalism. However, Jil did not retreat, continuing to develop her style, inspired by modernist architecture and the ideas of the Bauhaus. She overcame a poorly received first Jil Sander Paris collection shown at the
Plaza Athénée in 1975 and listed her company on the
Frankfurt Stock Exchange at the end of the 1980s. In 1995, the Jil Sander group reported $114 million in sales. Nearly all the design and production staff left after her departure. For 2001, the Jil Sander Group reported a net loss of $9.4 million, its first ever. Sander returned to the company as head designer and partner in a surprise decision in May 2003, after her
noncompete clause had expired. Officially, Bertelli "approached Ms. Sander and began negotiating a truce". Bertelli had, with regard to Sander's departure in 2000, boldly stated before: "A brand as strong as Jil Sander doesn't need to rely on the name of a designer". She was rehired under a six-year consulting contract and also received an undisclosed stake in the company and a seat on Prada's strategic committee. In November 2004, Sander terminated cooperation with Prada for good and
resigned from her post again after insurmountable differences with Mr. Bertelli. Prada announced in an official statement that "the decision by Patrizio Bertelli [...] and Ms. Sander to end her involvement in the company was amicable." She withdrew from her involvement in her namesake brand. She continued her contributions and work at Uniqlo. The white stucco building in Hamburg that was once the Jil Sander showroom was re-proportioned by the New York architect
Michael Gabellini. The new company's first client was
Fast Retailing of Japan with its
Uniqlo label for whom Sander oversaw the design of womenswear and menswear collections called +J. The first collection for the 200910 autumnwinter season was launched worldwide on 1 October 2009 consisting of "about 40 pieces for men and 100 for women, including coats, jackets, knitwear, T-shirts and accessories" featuring the Minimalist aesthetic and demure colors typical of Jil Sander. The second line of +J designed for spring and summer wear, was launched on 23 December 2009 throughout Asia including Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong and China, and on 7 January 2010 in the London stores. It was to be launched in Uniqlo's sole US store in New York City on 14 January 2010. This collection will see more retail drops during the Spring and Summer seasons. Following a successful run of three years, Sander and Uniqlo's parent company, Fast Retailing, announced that the partnership agreement would not be renewed at the end of 2011, marking the end of +J. The last collection from the collaborative label was for the Fall/Winter 2011 season. The split between the parties is said to have been mutual. +J returned to Uniqlo's store shelves and online shop for a Fall/Winter 2014 and Spring/Summer 2015 "best of" collection, featuring selected previously designed pieces by the partnership. Jil Sander worked with Uniqlo again in the 2020 autumnwinter season with collections for men and women. In 2021 the control of the Jil Sander brand passed to the Italian fashion holding
OTB Group. ==Recognition==