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QuoteTina Chow (born Bettina Louise Lutz; April 18, 1950 – January 24, 1992) was an American model and jewelry designer who was considered an influential fashion icon of the 1970s and 1980s. She was the second wife of restaurateur Michael Chow, the founder and owner of the Mr. Chow restaurant chain.
Modeling
In the mid-1960s, the family moved from Ohio to Japan, where Chow attended Sophia University.[1] Both sisters were later discovered by a modeling agent and became the faces of Japanese cosmetic line Shiseido and featured prominently in their ad campaigns from the early 1970s. During her modeling career she was photographed by Helmut Newton, Cecil Beaton and Arthur Elgort, among others.She was drawn by illustrator Antonio Lopez and painted by Andy Warhol. She was also the muse of designers Yves St. Laurent and Issey Miyake.
Chow was cited by fashion magazines for her unique style and her collection of Mariano Fortuny dresses. She routinely paired inexpensive items with high fashion pieces and mixed feminine and masculine styles simultaneously. Chow was also noted for her androgynous Eton crop hairstyle which she had cut at a New York barbershop and styled with Dippity Do. In 1985, she was named on the International Best Dressed List.
Jewellery designing
During the late 1980s, Tina Chow designed and produced several collections of jewelry. Using rock crystal, gold, silver, wood, bamboo, and silk cording. In 1987, the first collection was sold at Bergdorf Goodman in New York, Maxfield's in Los Angeles, at Ultimo in Chicago, and later (from 1988) at Gallerie Naila Monbrison in Paris. Perhaps one of the best known pieces in the collection is the "Kyoto Bracelet," which is a woven bamboo bangle which encases seven rough rock crystals or rose quartz in their natural form. The crystals, left loose inside the bamboo casing, rattle around as the wearer moves about. For the bamboo wrapping and basketry work in the collection Chow enlisted Kosuge Shochikudo, one of Japan's master craftsmen in the art of bamboo. In April 1988, designer Calvin Klein accessorized the showing of his Fall/Winter 1988/89 collection with Chow's jewelry.
en.wikipedia.org


HARPER‘S BAZAAR FRANCE MAR./APR.1986 - photo Eva Sereny
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source elegantly papered

ENRICO COVERI Fall/Winter 1984/1985 supplement L‘UOMO VOGUE Dec.1984 - photo unknown
together with Iman Abdulmajid Bowie
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eBay

Michael Gross - Last Angel (a book about Tina Chow‘s life)
„She’s still got “it.” The late Tina Chow–jewelry designer, restaurant hostess, best-dressed fashion icon, muse–has her second New York magazine cover this week, featured as the epitome of the New York City It Girl. Her first cover, just over than 31 years ago, which tells the whole story of her life and death as one of the first prominent women to succumb to AIDS, is one of the saddest yet most inspiring magazine pieces I ever wrote.“
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mgross

VANITY FAIR US Apr.1992 - David Bailey
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vanityfair

JAPANESE MAGAZINES 1960s & 1970s - photo unknown
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scmp / pinterest

Tina in 1992 - photo unknown
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scmp

SHISEIDO PERFUME unknow year - photo Serge Lutens
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FUJI FILM advertisement - year & photo unknown
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RANDOM ONLINE FINDS - photo unknown
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