Early life and education Isabel Marant was born on 12 April 1967 in Boulogne-Billancourt to a French father and German mother. Her parents divorced when Marant was six and she lived with her father who had remarried. In 1982, she asked her father to buy her a sewing machine and she started making clothes out of discarded clothing and fabric, and very soon, her friends asked her to design clothing for them. At 15, Marant was crazy about
Vivienne Westwood and she did babysitting to be able to buy something at Westwood's Paris shop. She pursued her studies at the Saint-James high school in Neuilly, then at HEC, before quickly changing direction following the success of the brand "Aller Simple," which she co-founded in 1984 with her friend
Christophe Lemaire, a young student (later artistic director of
Lacoste and
Hermès). They dropped it off to a
Le Depot shop in Paris that paid when clothes were sold. The clothing sold well enough to make her reconsider her plans to study economics. From 1985 to 1987, Marant studied fashion at
Studio Berçot, a Paris fashion college.
Early career In 1987, after her studies, Marant worked with Parisian designer
Michel Klein. Later she also collaborated with Bridget Yorke working on two collections and assisted art director Marc Ascoli on different projects for
Chloé,
Martine Sitbon, and
Yohji Yamamoto. However, working in other houses was a frustrating experience for her, and soon Marant decided to continue alone. In 1989, she launched a collection of belts and rings, followed by a line of belts for
Claude Montana, a line of buttons and necklaces for Étienne Brunel, and a line of shoe buckles for Michel Perry. In 1990 with her mother, she launched a knitwear and jersey label "Twen". == Isabel Marant™ ==