Diana Vreeland Biography, Age, Weight, Height, Friend, Like, Affairs, Favourite, Birthdate & Other

Diana Vreeland Biography, Age, Weight, Height, Friend, Like, Affairs, Favourite, Birthdate & Other

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This Biography is about one of the best Editors Diana Vreeland including her Height, weight,Age & Other Detail…

Biography Of Diana Vreeland
Real Name Diana Vreeland
Profession Journalists, Editors
Nick Name Diana Dalziel
Famous as Magazine editor, fashion journalist and special consultant
Nationality American
Personal life of Diana Vreeland
Born on 29 July 1906
Birthday 29th July
Died At Age 83
Sun Sign Leo
Born in Paris, France
Died on 22 August 1989
Place of death Manhattan, New York, United States
Family Background of Diana Vreeland
Father Frederick Young Dalziel
Mother Emily Key Hoffman
Siblings Alexandra Dalziel
Spouse/Partner Thomas Reed Vreeland (m. 1924-1966)
Children Thomas Reed Vreeland Jr., Frederick Vreeland
Discoveries / Inventions Sixties
Personal Fact of Diana Vreeland

Born as Diana Dalziel, Diana Vreeland was an American socialite, fashionista, columnist and editor associated with topnotch fashion magazines like Harper’s Bazaar and Vogue. She was known for her gifted language, her perception on global fashion, her ability to coin terms and phrases that immediately caught the attention of her readers and painting a stunning picture of fashion and fantasy, in relation to the ever changing social scenario, with her words.

Vreeland was discovered by editor Carmel Snow who gave her the chance to flourish in the field that had been her darling since the time she was growing up – fashion. Being a daughter of a wealthy socialite only helped Vreeland to cultivate the poise that she taught her readers for the rest of her life. On the top of it, getting married to a classy and even wealthier banker opened her to the kind of exposure that came handy in her career.

Vreeland ran her column Why Don’t You?, which made her a fashion guru amongst the American housewives of the 60s, for about 26 years. She joined Vogue as an editor-in-chief before she became a consultant with the Costume Institute of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Vreeland changed the American fashion industry when it was going through a dull phase.