List of Charvet customers

Charvet Place Vendôme or simply Charvet is a French high-end bespoke and ready-to-wear shirtmaker, located at 28 Place Vendôme in Paris. Its list of customers is notable[1] for its time span, Charvet existing since 1838 and having been the first shirt store ever,[2] and as a paradigm of an international[3] "aristo-dandy crossover community".[4] In the 19th century, the shirtmaker both specialized in "royal haberdashery"[5] and attracted the patronage of artists.[n. 1] In the 20th century, with the development of fashion design, designers and fashion journalists became a significant customer group. Some other customers' interest in the brand has become a notable aspect of their personality. In keeping[11] with a tradition of discretion of French couture houses,[n. 2] the company declines to comment on its customers list, as a service to its customers.[13]

Kings, princes, heads of state and heads of government

Portrait (1905) of King Edward VII by Luke Fildes, Royal College of Physicians
Name, surnameNationalityOccupationBorn
Abdul Hamid II[n. 3] Turkish Sultan 1842
Alfonso XII of Spain [n. 4] Spanish King 1857
Alfonso XIII of Spain [n. 5] Spanish King 1886
Antoine, Duke of Montpensier [n. 6] French Prince 1824
Barre, Raymond[19] French Prime minister 1924
Carter, Jimmy[20] American President 1924
Charles, Prince of Wales[21] British Prince 1948
Chirac, Jacques[22][23] French President 1932
Churchill, Winston[21] British Prime minister 1874
de Gaulle, Charles[24] French President 1890
Deschanel, Paul[25] French President 1855
Edward VII of the United Kingdom [n. 7] English King 1841
Edward VIII of the United Kingdom[3] English Prince 1894
Farouk of Egypt[31][32] Egyptian King 1920
Grimaldi, Stéphanie[33] Monegasque Princess 1965
Haughey, Charles [n. 8] Irish Prime minister 1925
Ali Jinnah, Muhamad[45] Pakistani Governor-General 1876
Kennedy, John F. [n. 9] American President 1917
Mitterrand, François[49] French President 1916
de Morny, Mathilde[50] French Princess 1863
Moro, Aldo[51] Italian Prime minister 1916
Nicholas I of Montenegro[52] Montenegrin King 1841
Obama, Barack[53] American President 1961
Pavlos of Greece[54] Greek Prince 1967
Pavlovich, Dmitri[55] Russian Grand Duke 1891
Singh, Bhupinder [n. 10] Indian Maharajah 1891
Philippe, comte de Paris[n. 11] French Prince 1838
Pompidou, Georges[59] French President 1911
Reagan, Ronald[60] American President 1911
Sarkozy, Nicolas[61] French President 1955
Truman, Harry[62] American President 1884

Writers, artists and actors

Portrait (1897) by Boldini of Montesquiou in a Charvet shirt and tie,[63] Musée d'Orsay
Name, surnameNationalityOccupationBorn
Acton, Harold[64] British Writer 1904
Adorf, Mario[65] German Actor 1930
Astaire, Fred[66] American Actor 1899
Baer, Édouard[67] French Actor 1966
Baudelaire, Charles[68] French Poet 1821
Barton, Ralph [n. 12] American Painter 1891
Beaton, Cecil[72] English Photographer 1904
Edwards Bello, Joaquín[73][74] Chilean Writer 1887
Bergen, Candice[75] American Actress 1946
Berlioz, Hector[76] French Composer 1803
Betjeman, John[77][78] British Writer 1906
Birkin, Jane[79] British Actress 1946
Bloom, Allan[80] American Writer 1930
Bourget, Paul[81][82] French Writer 1852
Brynner, Yul[24] Russian Actor 1920
Broun, Heywood[83] American Journalist 1888
Bywater, Michael[84] British Writer 1953
Cambaceres, Eugenio[85] Argentinian Writer 1843
Cocteau, Jean[24] French Writer 1889
Cooper, Gary[24] American Actor 1901
Condo, George[86] American Visual artist 1957
Coppola, Francis Ford[87][88] American Film director 1939
Coppola, Roman[87][88] American Film director 1965
Coppola, Sofia[89] American Film director 1971
Coward, Noël[90] British Actor 1899
Crosby, Bing[59] American Singer 1903
Crowley, Aleister[91] British Writer 1875
Dano, Paul[92] American Actor 1984
Debussy, Claude[24] French Composer 1862
Denby, Edwin[93] American Writer 1903
Deneuve, Catherine[60] French Actress 1943
Diaghilev, Sergei[94] Russian Ballet impresario 1872
D'Ormesson, Jean[95] French Writer 1925
Dujardin, Édouard[96] French Writer 1861
Dunaway, Faye[97] American Actress 1941
Eiffel, Gustave[98] French Architect 1832
Feig, Paul[99] American Director 1962
Fairbanks, Douglas[100] American Actor 1883
Fargue, Léon-Paul[101][102] French Writer 1876
Ferry, Brian[103][104] English Singer 1945
Février, Jacques[105] French Pianist 1900
Firbank, Ronald[106] British Writer 1886
Follett, Ken[107][108] English Writer 1949
Gainsbourg, Serge[109] French Singer 1928
Gary, Romain [n. 13] French Writer 1914
Gernsback, Hugo[111] American Writer 1884
Grant White, Richard[112] American Writer 1822
Guinness, Daphne[113] British Actress 1967
Guitry, Sacha[76] [n. 14] French Actor 1885
Hébertot, Jacques[115] French producer 1886
Hemingway, Ernest[116] American Writer 1899
Hergesheimer, Joseph[117][118] American Writer 1880
Hockney, David[119] British Painter 1937
Howard, Brian[120] British poet 1905
Kelly, Kevin[121] American editor 1952
Irons, Jeremy[122] English Actor 1948
Larbaud, Valery[24] French Writer 1881
Kaufman, George S.[123] American Writer 1889
Le Bargy, Charles[124] French Actor 1858
Lebowitz, Fran[125] American Writer 1950
Leigh Fermor, Patrick[126] British Writer 1915
Lennon, Sean[127] American Musician 1975
Lévy, Bernard-Henry [n. 15] French Writer 1948
Luchini, Fabrice[133] French Actor 1951
Manet, Édouard[134] French Painter 1832
Marcosson, Isaac Frederick[135] American editor 1877
Matisse, Henri[136][137] French Painter 1869
Mayle, Peter[138] British Writer 1939
Menjou, Adolphe[n. 16] American Actor 1890
Modiano, Patrick[140][141] French Writer 1945
Monet, Claude[142] French Painter 1840
Montesquiou, Robert de[6][n. 17] French Poet 1855
Morand, Paul[144] French Writer 1888
Noiret, Philippe[145] French Actor 1930
Niemeyer, Oscar[146] Brazilian Architect 1907
Offenbach, Jacques[98] French Composer 1819
Pidgeon, Walter[147] Canadian Actor 1897
Proust, Marcel [n. 18] French Writer 1871
Radiguet, Raymond[149] French Writer 1905
Reverdy, Pierre[137] French Writer 1889
Richman, Harry[150] American Actor 1895
Rostand, Edmond[151] French Writer 1868
Rostand, Maurice[152] French Writer 1891
Runyon, Damon[153] American Writer 1880
Sand, George[60] French Writer 1804
Schofield, Leo[154] Australian Critic 1935
Saraiva, André[155][156] French Graffiti artist 1971
Simenon, Georges[157][158] Belgian Writer 1903
Sitwell, Osbert[159][160] English Writer 1892
Stein, Gertrude[161] American Writer 1874
Thomson, Virgil[162] American Composer 1896
de Tocqueville, Alexis[163] French Writer 1805
Thurman, Uma[95] American Actress 1970
Van Vechten, Carl[164] American Photographer 1880
Waugh, Evelyn[165] English Writer 1903
Welles, Orson[166] American Film director 1915
White, Stanford[167] American Architect 1853
Wilde, Oscar[168][169] Irish Writer 1854
Wilder, Billy[170] American Film director 1906
Willis, Bruce[171] American Actor 1955
Wolfe, Tom[172] American Writer 1931
Wright, Frank Lloyd[173] American Architect 1867
Zola, Émile[98] French Writer 1840

Designers and fashion specialists

Caricature (1920s) by Sem of Berry Wall at Charvet
Name, surnameNationalityOccupationBorn
Altuzarra, Joseph[174] French Designer 1985
Baron, Fabien [n. 19] French Editor 1959
Bastian, Michael[177] American Fashion designer 1965
Blahnik, Manolo[178] Spanish Designer 1942
Boateng, Ozwald[179] British Designer 1967
Bowles, Hamish[180] British Editor 1963
Campbell, Thomas P.[181] American Museum director 1962
Cardin, Pierre[20] French Designer 1922
de Castelbajac, Jean-Charles[182] French designer 1949
Chanel, Coco[24] [n. 20] French Designer 1883
Conran, Jasper[185] English Designer 1959
Dello Russo, Anna[186] Italian Editor at large 1962
Elkann, Lapo[187] Italian Entrepreneur 1977
Ettedgui, Joseph[188][189] British Fashion retailer 1936
Fekkai, Frédéric[190] French Hairdresser 1958
Galanos, James[191] American Designer 1924
Galliano, John[192][193][194] English Designer 1960
Kors, Michael[195][196][197] American Designer 1959
Lagerfeld, Karl[20] German Designer 1933
Louboutin, Christian [n. 21] French Designer 1963
Monteil Germaine[203] French Designer 1898
Moss, Kate[95] English Model 1974
Mugler, Thierry[204] French Designer 1948
O'Brien, Glenn[205][206] American Editor
Ossendrijver, Lucas[207] Dutch Artistic director 1971
Perriand, Charlotte[208] French Designer 1903
Picasso, Paloma[75] French Designer 1949
Posen, Zac[209] American Designer 1980
Roitfeld, Carine[210] French Editor-in-Chief 1954
Rucci, Ralph [n. 22] American Designer 1957
Saint Laurent, Yves[3] French Designer 1936
Sánchez, Fernando[213] Spanish Fashion designer 1935
Sarafpour, Behnaz[214] American Designer
Takada, Kenzo[20] Japanese Designer 1939
Taschen, Benedikt[215] German Art publisher 1961
Talley, André Leon [n. 23] American Editor 1949
Testino, Mario[221] Peruvian Photographer 1954
Tisci, Riccardo[222] Italian Designer 1974
Tonchi, Stefano[223] American Editor 1959
Touhami, Ramdane[224] French Designer 1974
von Fürstenberg, Diane[225] German Fashion designer 1946
Wall, Berry [n. 24] American Socialite 1860
Wolff, Michael[229] American Journalist 1953
York, Peter[230] British Columnist

Other clients with a notable interest in Charvet

Photo (2009) of Ray Kelly wearing a Charvet tie reproduced in Chaille's Book of Ties.[24]
Name, surnameNationalityOccupationBorn
Bigelow, William Sturgis [n. 25] American Doctor 1850
Blagojevich, Rod [n. 26] American Politician 1956
Capel, Arthur "Boy" [n. 27] English Businessman 1881
Kelly, Ray [n. 28] American Commissioner 1941
Madoff, Bernard [n. 29] American Stockbroker 1938
Tang, David [n. 30] Chinese Businessman 1954

Notes

  1. According to Robert de Montesquiou, "nobody in the world ever saw such things! Pinks, blues, lilacs, in silk, and in cobweb! Charvet is the greatest artist in the Creation".[6] Jean Cocteau called Charvet "magic"[7] and wrote that it is "where the rainbow finds ideas".[8] According to the French historian Anne Martin-Fugier, referring to Balzac's notion of the "triple aristocracy of money, power and talent",[9] the participation of artists was characteristic of the lifestyle of the Parisian fashionable upper class: "their works proceed of their person, bear its mark and testify of its value as the walk, the style, the luxury of the furnishing proceeds of the person of the man of quality".[10]
  2. At the end of the 19th century Édouard Charvet made a point of never greeting first a lady customer in the street.[12]
  3. Abdul Hamid II, though he advocated "simplicity"[14] in every day clothing, was a "sumptuous"[15] customer of Charvet suits. He ordered some 40 costumes a year and trusted the taste of Charvet for the selection of the cloth.[16] Charvet "barely dared" send invoices to the sultan.[15],[17] A white monogrammed waistcoat made for him by Charvet is on display at the Topkapı Palace.[18]
  4. Warrant of Proveedor de la Real Casa granted in 1878.
  5. Warrant of Proveedor de la Real Casa granted in 1913.
  6. Warrant of Proveedor de la Real Casa granted in 1879.
  7. In 1869, Charvet was granted a royal warrant of "chemisier in Paris" (shirtmaker in Paris)[26] to the prince of Wales and would remain his shirt maker into the 20th century, appointed in 1903 "hosier and glover in Paris".[27] As Edward VII was considered an "arbiter of masculine fashions" and looked upon "as the glass of fashion for his day",[28] this patronage contributed significantly to the notoriety of Charvet: an 1874 guide advised American tourists Charvet shirts were one of Paris specialties, "stamped with high approval by the patronage of the Prince of Wales".[29] The patronage stirred polemics in the United Kingdom, as the prince was "accused of not sufficiently encouraging home industries and of purchasing annually hundreds of pairs of gloves on the continent".[30]
  8. The shirtmaker achieved significant[34] – and sometimes exaggerated[35] – coverage in Irish media when it emerged that former Taoiseach Charles Haughey, then after nicknamed "Charvet Charlie",[36] had misappropriated over $50,000 of state funds while in office to purchase shirts and dressing gowns from Charvet, where the staff addressed him as "your excellency",[37] and had them delivered via the diplomatic "black box" system,[38] at a time when he was exhorting Irish citizens to "tighten their belts". This was described by Mr Haughey himself as "having gone into the folklore"[39] and resulted in a surge of Irish visitors at the Paris store.[40] · [41] · [42] According to The Boston Globe, conspicuous Irish visitors to the Charvet shop "pose for photographs outside the venerable shop, and sometimes venture inside to gawk at the crystal chandeliers, the oak paneling, the Oriental rugs and the cuff links in bowls scattered around the shop. And they pose indelicate questions about their former prime minister".[43] When Sebastian Barry's Hinterland, a play on Haughey, was first played in 2002, the Sunday Tribune reviewer asked: "Is this a Charvet shirt I see before me?"[44]
  9. Kennedy wore custom-made shirts from Charvet but kept their origin a secret.[46] He had the labels of his Charvet shirts removed.[47] A Charvet shirt having belonged to Kennedy is on display at Berlin's Checkpoint Charlie Museum.[48]
  10. The maharaja once placed a single order of 86 dozen shirts.[56] Charvet had to construct special trunks to ship them to him.[57] Each item was embroidered with his crest. The bill for the monogramming alone was $ 67,000.[58]
  11. Warrant granted in 1893.
  12. Barton's haberdashery came from Charvet's, Place Vendôme,[69] and embraced "a varied assortment of colored striped shirts, with drawers and collars of the same material to match each shirt, white silk undershirts, beige silk pajamas (emblazoned with white frogs), and white, watered-silk suspenders. Each of his pairs of trousers ha[d] its own pair of suspenders".[70] "In Paris he began to affect Charvet cravats encircled with a scarab seal ring."[71]
  13. The French writer wore a red silken Charvet dressing gown when he committed suicide, to ensure blood did not show too much.[110]
  14. Charvet created for Guitry a double button turned-down cuff often referred to as the "milanese" cuff.[114]
  15. Bernard-Henri Lévy, often referred to as BHL, is described as a "provocateur", a "showman", who "wears the mantle of polarizing intellectual quite happily along with made-to-measure clothing from French house Charvet".[128] His shirt style has become a signature,[129] but he says he "has no interest discussing the suavely unbuttoned garment that for his fans and his detractors alike has become synonymous with his name."[130] Nevertheless, his critics consider this unbuttoned white shirt "is an important element of BHL's TV and public images and it tells a lot about the man. If you tried it with your own shirt, the collar would sag. But BHL's shirts are specially designed by the famous shirt-maker Charvet, with collars that withstand the unbuttoning and never disappear under his jacket",[131] also made by Charvet.[132]
  16. Menjou had the reputation to be Hollywood's "best dressed man" and lived up to it by coming onto the set each day with Charvet dressing gowns.[139]
  17. In a letter to Montesquiou, Marcel Proust alludes to a caricature by Sem of Montesquiou examining fabrics at Charvet.[143]
  18. "His shirts and waistcoasts were from Charvet, he told me. What interested him in Charvet was the sign of a certain world, of a certain elegance"[148]
  19. Asked by a reporter of Fashion Week Daily: "Do you have a uniform?". He answered: "Black cashmere sweater, Charvet shirt, Levi's, and Converse All Stars."[175] "He has bought his dress shirts at Charvet in Paris for the last 15 years", wrote the New York Times in 2004.[176]
  20. She used Charvet ties as belts for herself[183] and as a ballet costume designer[184]
  21. Louboutin wears Charvet shirts[198] and collects Charvet ties, which he owns in hundreds[199] and considers "the most treasured part" of his wardrobe and a "constant source of inspirations:[200]" If I go shopping, it might be to buy two or three more ties, which I never wear, or shirts from Charvet on Place Vendôme. Here they have the most magnificent colored ties: it's like looking at a lovely garden. I have tons of them at home and I am perfectly happy not to wear them."[201] One of his line of lady shoes had "witty, wicked designs made of Charvet tie fabric".[202]
  22. A "crisp white Charvet shirt, made to his own specifications by the famed Paris menswear store"[211] is Rucci's "signature".[212] His fabric of choice is "the "heavy, white piqué" that he replenishes three times a year. There is a tradition of care [at Charvet] that the want to be perfect. It is really couture for men" declares Rucci [... He] estimates that he now owns at least 110 of the shirts that have become his trademark, every last one in white piqué with "two lowercase Rs embroidered in cinnabar [his signature color] at the base of the neck [...] I must have tried 25 other fabrics but I always end up giving them away [...] My white piqué shirts empowers me."[13]
  23. Talley wears "tie[s] and socks [...] from Charvet of Paris, the same couturier that used to make – along with the Duke of Windsor's shirts – [his] boxer shorts, until that became "cost prohibitive".[216] He is also keen about Charvet shirts:"I have a wonderful white cotton shirt. I always love white cotton shirts. Pique collar and cuffs, from Paris. It wasn't imported from Paris; I went to Paris and had it fitted. I had fittings. I have fittings for my neckties. My neckties from Charvet. You have to have fittings for your tie ... so it's the right length. My socks are from Charvet. I don't have fittings for those".[217] He explains: "I admire perfection in small details. Look at these cuffs. (He holds his shirt under [a journalist's] eyes) Look at the stitches on the piqué. Where can this be done today? Only Charvet in Paris, Place Vendôme. All my shirts are custom made at Charvet."[218] In a January issue of Vogue, he wrote his New Year's fashion resolution was "to order custom Charvet pique tennis shorts and silk kneesocks the color of clotted cream".[219] In a sequence of the movie The September Issue, he says: "I have these custom nightshirts made at Charvet in Paris. I only wear them when I am at Mr. Karl Laggerfield's summer house vacationing. For if you pass Mr. Karl Laggerfield in the hallway, you must be appropriately attired at all times!".[220]
  24. Berry Wall, nicknamed the "King of the Dudes, added to Charvet's fame by the caricatures of him produced by Sem. At that time, Wall was living with his wife and chow dog Chi-Chi in the Hôtel Meurice, near Charvet, where he had the same signature ties and "spread eagle" collar shirts made for himself and his dog. Wall's famous "startling" striped shirts in red and sky blue were well known, with their very high false collars of a pattern different from the shirt's. His dog not only dined with him,[226] but also wore Charvet collars and ties in the same style and fabric as his master's.[227] The caricature shown had so much success that the Paris restaurant Ciro's, where Wall was a regular patron, had a reproduction of the dog made, in stuffed fabric, with his master's false collar around the neck, to be offered to guests.[228] The caricature (top, right) is reproduced in François Chaille's Book of Ties,[24] but Chaille fails to identify Wall.
  25. "At once an epicure and a mystic, [Bigelow] professed an ascetic religion and wore beautiful Charvet haberdashery",[231] particularly neckties[232] and silk shirts. Charvet "disapprove[d] of the silk shirts, the use of which, he allege[d], [was] confined to Mr James Hazen Hyde and a few bounders of his class. Yet, to please [him], Mr Charvet kindly consent[ed] to make [him] a pattern silk shirt, provided he [could] accompany it by a pattern linen pleated shirt, to be made up starchless, like a handkerchief.".[233]
  26. According to a Chicago Tribune journalist: "Historians should note that, although Blagojevich has made much of his humble beginnings, his elegant pearl-gray [is from] Charvet [...] he now buys only Charvet."[234] Charvet is noted as his "preferred [tie] brand".[235] During his federal trial, court records established that he bought at Neiman Marcus at least two of those ties there, paying $170 for one in 2007 and $195 for the other in 2008".[236] A Saks associate said over the phone that he believed another associate there had sold Charvet ties at $195 to Blagojevich.[237]
  27. In the early 20th century, Charvet launched a toilet water, in a rectangular beveled bottle. One of the customers for this perfume was Boy Capel, Coco Chanel's lover. In 1921, two years after his accidental death, the flacon of Chanel's famous  5 perfume was produced in the image of the Charvet bottle used by Capel.[238]
  28. Mr Kelly's ideal style is "bespoke suits and Charvet ties."[239] Often noted for wearing Charvet ties,[240] he admits a "personal weakness for [...] Charvet neckwear",[241] which is "high quality and look[s] the best"[242] and he considers as "some sort of statement".[53] On other occasions, he presented this predilection as part of his business behaviour, saying: "Contrary to what was suggested,if the mayor replaces me, I will not miss wearing my [...] Charvet tie".[243] Mr. Kelly says he "can tell when someone's wearing Charvet from a distance – even dark colors stand out".[53]
  29. An auction of articles once belonging to Bernard Madoff was organized on November 13, 2010 by the United States Marshals Service[244] to compensate victims of Madoff's Ponzi scheme.[245] The auction included many items from Charvet, such as 138 pairs of socks,[246] 11 boxer shorts,[247] "loads of neckties"[248] and "hundreds of sweaters, polo shirts, and custom-made monogrammed Charvet dress shirts."[245]
  30. Tang, who likes to wear at home "all days pyjamas – custom made in cotton by Charvet",[249] has Charvet embroider " "Do not disturb DT" or "DT sleeping" on the pocket. [He says] the most luxurious thing is to change your fine Egyptian-cotton pyjamas and sheets each day"[250] · [251] and considers Charvet "the best shirtmaker in the world".[252]

Sources

  1. Stubbs, Tom (June 12, 2010). "Charvet". Finch's Quarterly Review. Archived from the original on October 24, 2010. Retrieved October 19, 2010. It's a remarkably formidable list on any level, let alone a shirt-based one.
  2. Gavenas, Mary Lisa (2008). Encyclopedia of Menswear. New York: Fairchild Publications. p. 86. ISBN 978-1-56367-465-5.
  3. Soltes, Eileen (April 2007). "Get shirty". Portfolio. Retrieved October 1, 2008. Founded in 1838, the Paris house quickly became tailor of choice for French aristocrats, and over the years it built a diverse international fan base.
  4. Stubbs, Tom (June 25, 2006). "Men of the cloth". The Sunday Times.
  5. Exposition universelle internationale de 1889 à Paris. Rapports du jury international. Groupe IV, class 35 (in French). Paris: Imprimerie nationale. 1890. pp. 329, 356. Retrieved November 25, 2008.
  6. Munhall, Edgar (1995). Whistler and Montesquiou. The Butterfly and the Bat. Paris: Flammarion. pp. 142–145. ISBN 978-2-08-013577-3.
  7. Steegmuller, Francis (1970). Cocteau, a biography. Boston: Little, Brown and Company. p. 47.
  8. Cocteau, Jean (1912). La danse de Sophocle (in French). Paris: Mercure de France. p. 133. Charvet où l'arc-en ciel prend ses idées.
  9. Balzac, Honoré (1981). Traité de la vie élégante. Pléiade (in French). XII. Paris: Gallimard. pp. 211–257.
  10. Martin-Fugier, Anne (1990). La vie élégante, ou, La formation du Tout-Paris, 1815–1848 (in French). Paris: Fayard. ISBN 2-213-02501-0.
  11. "What's hot". WWD. December 6, 1999. Part of our success comes from our discretion
  12. "Le salut des fournisseurs". Le Figaro (in French). March 2, 1893. Retrieved April 9, 2011.
  13. Gavenas, Marilise (February 12, 2007). "On the Right Bank; at the Storied House of Charvet, Luxury comes in Superabundance". DNR. Archived from the original on November 4, 2012. Retrieved October 21, 2008.
  14. Vahbi bey, Ali. Avant la débâcle de la Turquie. Pensées et souvenirs de l'ex-Sultan Abdul-Hamid (in French). Paris and Neufchâtel: Altinger Frères. pp. 35–36. [Les pachas] ne se soucient absolument pas de la simplicité [...] je donne moi-même l'exemple sous ce rapport
  15. Tezcan, Hülya (1984). A late 19th Century Tailor's Order-Book (in Turkish). Istanbul: Türkiye Turing ve Otomobil Kurumu. p. 53. … Yil bile "notunu" göndermekten çekinmeyen Charvet bana bir keresinde söyle demisti : "Bu sahane müsteriden öyle kazandim ki son faturayi gönderme …
  16. Ekdal, Müfid (1992). Kadiköy konaklari. Istanbul: Sadberk Hanim Müzesi. p. 39. ISBN 9789750807589.
  17. Tezcan, Hülya (1992). 19.yy sonuna ait bir terzi defteri. Istanbul: Sadberk Hanim Müzesi. p. 39. ISBN 978-975-95457-3-4. On one occasion Charvet told me "I made so much money from this magnificent customer that l could have forgone sending that last bill but l thought l ought to let his brother, the new sovereign, know that l was at his service".
  18. Tezcan, Hülya (2008). Tailors to the court: M. Palma – D. Lena – P. Parma. Istanbul: Sadberk Hanim Müzesi. ISBN 978-975-6959-27-5. In the Topkapi Palace collection there is only a single white waistcoat that bears the label of Charvet (13/692). Inside one of the bands that emerges from the side seams to buckle in the back, Abdülhamid's initials, 'A' and 'H', are embroidered side by side in red silk thread
  19. Bazin, François; Joseph Macé-Scaron (1993). Les politocrates: vie, moeurs et coutumes de la classe politique (in French). Paris: Seuil. p. 224. ISBN 978-2-02-015170-2. Raymond Barre ne déchoit pas en restant fidèle aux chemises Charvet, qui couvrent ses rondeurs
  20. Monique (March 5, 1978). "Paris Has the Market Collared". Colorado Springs Gazette-Telegraph. Retrieved July 11, 2015. Even President Carter's recent whirlwind world trip slowed in Paris long enough for a White House aide with motorcycle escort, to pause at the shop and pick up a selection of ties.
  21. Nowosielska, Anetta (January 14, 2010). "Destination Paris". ParisPulse. Retrieved January 3, 2011. There was a reason why gentlemen, from Duke of Windsor to Winston Churchill, from Prince Charles to President Mitterrand had their shirts, ties and pocket squares made from Place Vendôme's Charvet.
  22. Probst, Jean-François (2007). Chirac, mon ami de trente ans (in French). Paris: Denoel. p. ch. 6. ISBN 2-207-25824-6.
  23. Carret, Martine (December 2, 2010). "J'ai maquillé Jacques Chirac". Paris Match (in French). Retrieved December 7, 2010. Régis a repassé les chemises de la Maison Charvet, arrivées en direct de la place Vendôme. Nous sommes un peu intimidés par ce luxe, et j'essaie de meubler la conversation. Je dois ouvrir la chemise de Jacques Chirac afin de ne pas la tacher pendant que je le maquille.
  24. Chaille, François (1994). The book of ties. Paris: Flammarion. p. 119. ISBN 2-08-013568-6.
  25. Morand, Paul (1931). 1900 A.D. W. F. Payson.
  26. Federal Supplement. [First Series.] 568. Federal Supplement. 1983. p. 471. In 1869, Charvet was appointed "chemisier [ie, shirtmaker] in Paris" to Edward VII when he was Prince of Wales and later was appointed "hosier and glover in Paris
  27. "No. 27512". The London Gazette. January 2, 1903. p. 13.
  28. Bergner Hurlock, Elizabeth (1976). The psychology of dress: an analysis of fashion and its motive. Manchester: Ayer publishing. p. 109. ISBN 978-0-405-08644-1.
  29. Morford, Henry. Morford's short-trip guide to Europe. New York: Lee, Shepard & Dillingham. p. 430.
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  32. Assouline, Pierre (November 15, 2005). "La touche Bober" (in French). La république des lettres. Archived from the original on October 1, 2010. Retrieved May 22, 2010. le chemisier de Proust, du roi Farouk
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  74. Edwards Bello, Joaquín (2004). Criollos en Paris (in Spanish). Aguilar Chilena de Ediciones. p. 386. ...para comprarme corbatas y guantes de Charvet
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  88. Fraysse, Bertrand (November 30, 2012). "Sous toutes les coutures". Challenges (in French). Retrieved November 8, 2013. Sofia Coppola assure avoir été initiée par son père et son frère Roman à l'art de ses chemises sur mesure
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  102. Fargue, Léon-Paul (1949). Etc ... (in French). Éditions du Milieu du monde. p. 183. Un maître comme Charvet n'habillait pas tout le monde. Il accueillait gentiment l'intrus et lui donnait l'adresse d'un grand magasin
  103. Mills, Simon. "French Dressing". Hedge – Issue 7. Retrieved October 16, 2010. Bryan Ferry has Charvet construct him ties at a szpecified, conically curtailed, schoolboy length
  104. Mereu-Boulch, Laurent (November 13, 2010). "En privé avec ... Brian Ferry". Le Figaro Madame (in French). Retrieved November 29, 2010. Les trois basiques de votre dressing ? ... Les chemises sur mesure Charvet...
  105. Crosby, Caresse (1968). The Passionate Years. Southern Illinois University Press. p. 290. ISBN 0-912946-66-0.
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  109. Brunel, Charlotte (December 9, 2014). "L'interview yin et yang". L'Express (in French). Mon modèle absolu [says Isabel Marant] ? Serge Gainsbourg. Il devait posséder dans son dressing une vingtaine de chemises blanches Charvet.
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  113. "Ein Königreich für ein Hemd – Charvet" (in German). Horston. January 2012. Retrieved May 26, 2012. Daphne Guinness lässt alle ihre Blusen dort machen.
  114. Leonforte, Pierre (November 22, 1999). "Le secret des mousquetaires". Le Figaro (in French). Retrieved October 29, 2010.
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  116. Wilson, Earl (September 30, 1957). "Gent's Fashion Slightly Dog-Eared". The Miami News. Retrieved April 9, 2011.
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  125. Linville, James Scott (December 10, 2010). "'Black reads as intelligence'". Financial Times. Retrieved December 15, 2010. I thought about my friend Fran Lebowitz, who wears a ... white Charvet shirt ... a uniform she claims is the ideal for "not writing".
  126. Brothers, Barbara; Gergits, Julia Marie (1999). British travel writers, 1940–1997. Detroit: Gales Group. p. 80. ISBN 0-7876-3098-5. The gear these upper-class British adventurers took with them included Charvet pajamas and fourteen bottles of airport whiskey
  127. Piersanti, Jessica (October 17, 2009). "Sean Lennon & Charlotte Kemp Muhl: Les Enfants". Madame Figaro (in French). La meilleure adresse pour les chemises d'homme.
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  131. Ireland, Doug (March 3, 2006). "The lies of Bernard-Henry Lévy". In These Times. Retrieved November 16, 2008.
  132. Roiphe, Katie (February 25, 2011). "French Philosopher Bernard-Henri Lévy On Style and Why People Hate Him". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved April 5, 2011.
  133. Beigbeder, Frédéric (November 2010). "L'interview de Frédéric Beigbeider. Fabrice Luchini". GQ Magazine (in French). Archived from the original on July 15, 2011. Retrieved December 1, 2010. C'est le seul chemisier... Charvet, tu oublies sinon. C'est le seul luxe, ne pas voir tomber la manche au milieu de la main.
  134. Nowell, Iris (2004). Generation Deluxe: Consumerism and Philanthropy of the New Super-rich. Dundurn Press Ltd. p. 137. ISBN 1-55002-503-1.
  135. Marcosson, Isaac Frederick (1959). Before I forget. New York: Dodd, Mead and Company. p. 163. In those years I had my shirts made by Charvet, the famous French chemisier, who specialized in daring, colorful patterns, which Northcliffe termed "loud". He constantly ribbed me about them and called me The Shirt King. On a photograph of himself which he gave me he wrote: "To His Radiance, Le Roi de Chemise".
  136. Azoulay, Claude; Thérond, Roger (2001). Encounters with great painters: the artists, Bacon ... Harry N. Abrams. p. 14. ISBN 978-0-8109-4396-4. Matisse's shirts! — he had them hand tailored at Charvet's.
  137. Duhême, Jacqueline (1986). Line et les autres (in French). Gallimard. p. 3. J'apprendrai longtemps après que Matisse faisait faire ses costumes chez Charvet, place Vendôme, tout comme son ami Pierre Reverdy.
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  140. Modiano, Patrick (1969). La ronde de nuit (in French). Gallimard. p. 60.
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  144. Bulteau, Michel (1988). Paul Morand (in French). Editions du Rocher. p. 32. ISBN 2-268-00655-7.
  145. Noiret, Philippe (2007). Mémoires cavalières (in French). Laffont. p. 7. ISBN 2-221-10793-4.
  146. Murphy, Robert (Spring–Summer 2010). "Shirt tales". Man about town. French shirt maker Charvet has dressed everyone from Oscar Wilde to Oscar Niemeyer
  147. Dubow, Charles (December 13, 1997). "The joys of Jermyn Street". Forbes. Retrieved January 13, 2010.
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  150. Richman, Harry; Gehman, Richard (1966). A hell of a life. Duell, Sloan and Pearce. p. 23.
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  152. Rostand, Maurice (1948). Confessions d'un demi siècle (in French). Jeune Parque. p. 109.
  153. Weiner, Edward Horace (1948). The Damon Runyon story. Longmans, Green. p. 199. He has— or had— 3000 Charvet neckties, which is more than Charvet has now
  154. "Leo Schofield's personal addresses in Paris". France Guide. Archived from the original on February 27, 2009. Retrieved May 21, 2009.
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  157. Carly, Michel (2000). Simenon, la vie d'abord (in French). Editions dy Cefal. p. 45. ISBN 978-2-87130-083-0. ...des chemises en soie façonnées à ses mesures par Charvet
  158. Grassi, Manuela (June 20, 2003). "Io e Simenon". Panorama (in Italian). Archived from the original on July 26, 2011. Retrieved May 14, 2011. Era molto elegante, adorava le camicie Charvet
  159. Ziegler, Philip (1998). Osbert Sitwell. London: Chatto & Windus. p. 40. ISBN 978-1-85619-646-8.
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  170. Wilder, Billy (2001). Billy Wilder: Interviews. University Press of Mississippi. p. 24. ISBN 1-57806-444-9.
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  177. "Ma deuxième saison sous mon nom était inspirée par "The other side of Aspen"". Têtu (in French). Têtu. April 20, 2011. Il faut s'offrir une fois dans sa vie ce luxe: c'est la seule expérience de haute couture pour homme!
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  180. "Style Compass". 1stdibs. Retrieved June 10, 2010. I love Charvet ties and pocketsquares for their sensational and subtle colors, prints and weaves
  181. Abramovitch, Ingrid (December 2012). "Shortlist: The Metropolitan Museum of Art's Thomas Campbell". Elle Decoration. Retrieved December 4, 2013.
  182. Lelièvre, Marie-Dominique (January 19, 2006). "Jean-Charles de Castelbajac: Un cas dans la mode". L'Express (in French). Retrieved June 26, 2010.
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  185. Swengley, Nicole (December 17, 2001). "The style gurus' wish-list ; Want to give a swanky present? Our leading arbiters of taste come up with some ideas for Nicole Swengley". Evening Standard. Jasper Conran, designer "Charvet's shirts are fantastic quality, come in lovely colours and have the double cuffs I always wear because of my passion for vintage cuff links"
  186. "Anna Dello Russo. Vogue Japan's'flamboyant creative consultant telLs us what she loves most about Paris". Air France Madame. April 1, 2011. CHARVET, the shirtmaker's shop, where I find bowties, neckties, shirts, tuxedo belts and ail sorts of men's clothes that I wear myself
  187. Mantoux, Aymeric (October 2013). "Lapo se pacse avec Gucci". L'Optimum (in French). Certaines [idées] proviennent de choses que j'ai déjà demandées pour moi chez Charvet à Paris.
  188. Swengley, Nicole (June 10, 2002). "The shopaholic's guide to Paris". Evening Standard. Brompton Cross's finest, Joseph, regularly hits Charvet, 38 Place Vendôme, for gorgeously coloured cotton shirts, silk ties and pochettes.
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gollark: I'd like to note that you can't add stuff to the package manager for everyone to see without Kepler approving/adding it somehow. You would probably need to submit a PR somewhere. Best to actually write the program first.
gollark: <@186486131565527040> https://wiki.computercraft.cc/User:Yemmel/Project_ideas
gollark: I meant CC ones, but those work too.
gollark: https://wiki.computercraft.cc/User:Yemmel/Project_ideas
gollark: There's a good list somewhere...

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