February 22, 2012

Deborah Meaden

From an especially early age Deborah Meaden knew she wanted her very own business.Having left college after O-levels Deborah studied at business university and following graduation worked as a sales room model in a fashion house before moving to Italy.

At the age of nineteen, with little capital she launched her very own glass and ceramics import company supplying upmarket stores like Harvey Nichols. Her next business venture was starting one of the first Stefanels franchises in the country but she shortly became discontented with the franchise model, and sold her share to her business partner.

A couple of profitable businesses in the leisure and retail sector later on she joined her family’s business.

Starting on the store floor, Deborah ultimately became MD of Weststar Vacations. In 1999 she went on to procure the major shareholding in a management buyout, later selling the company in a deal worth £33m while keeping a 23% stake.

Deborah still kept a pro-active role at Weststar, but started to dedicate more time to finding sound investment opportunities, including those she found on Dragons ‘ Den, which she joined in 2006 at the beginning of series three.

In Aug 2007, she sold her remaining stake when Weststar Vacations was sold for £83m. She’s now a full time financier with a portfolio which goes from fashion to software, waste control to market research.

Deborah supports numerous charities and is chair of the Childline “Child’s Voice Appeal South West”. Also she is involved with environmental charities and initiatives and has lately accepted a role as an envoy for the WWF.

Deborah lives in Somerset with partner Paul and a selection of pets.

Coco Chanel

Gabrielle, later Coco, Chanel was born in 1883 in the poorhouse in which her mum worked. This humble environment, which she was supposed to famously imprecise about, characterized her early life.

Gabrielle’s mum died when she was still a kid, and she was just about deserted by her dad who was a travelling sales representative. She went into the orphanage of the Catholic priory of Aubazine, and that was here that she learned the trade of a seamstress from the nuns.

The nuns even lined up work as a seamstress for the young Gabrielle, but she denied this trail and instead tried to make a vocation as a frontman in cafeterias.

It was in this quick flirtation with show-business that she bought the nickname Coco, and the relations she formed there, especially her relationship with lothario Etienne Balsan, finally meant she had the finances to head off to Paris and open her very own shop.

Another acquaintance of Coco’s backed her growth from hats to attire, and sponsored the opening of shops in the tidal resorts of Deauville and Biarritz.

Nevertheless her outstanding success from this point was down to her talent and difficult work. Her designs caught the public’s attention and the shops quickly expanded. She was the 1st designer to use jersey in the 1920s and her attire were amazingly favored by girls bored with corseted fashions, attracted to the more manlike fashions favoured by Chanel.

The launch of Chanel No five, the 1st perfume to be named after a designer, and a big boost to her brand in addition to her classic small black dress, sealed her success, and she became possibly the most vital figure in the history of twentieth century fashion.