Like many high schoolers in the early to mid-2000s, Telsha Anderson-Boone spent a lot of time scrolling through Tumblr. A fashion obsessiveânow 30, she owns and operates her own store, called T.A., in New Yorkâshe saved any image that piqued her interest to a folder on her computer called âStyle.âShe didnât realize it at the time, but many of the looks she liked had something in common: They were all designed by Phoebe Philo, the then-creative director of Celine (the brand was styled âCĂ©lineâ during her tenure, but has since rebranded sans the accent). Later, Anderson-Boone changed the folder name to simply âPP.â
In September, Philo will launch her own eponymous label after a five-year hiatus from the industry and public life. Excitement around her return has been mounting pretty much since the day she left. But for many shoppers in their late twenties and early thirties, who were in middle school when Philo was at ChloĂ© (2001â2006), and high school and college when she was at CĂ©line (2008â2018), the occasion is an especially momentous one. Finally, after years of collecting âOld CĂ©line,â as they call it, and hearing their elders talk about the good old days, when it was everywhere and theirs for the taking, they can purchase Philoâs ready-to-wear fresh off the rack and participate in the frenzy themselves.
âWhen I was in college, I could barely afford a slice of pizza, so at the time there was no way I was buying $800 shoes or a $1,500 dress,â Anderson-Boone says. âSo I saved them [to the folder], and then I began to discover resale.â Over time, she tracked down and invested in her Old CĂ©line favorites: leather mules, the two-tone Madame ankle boots from spring 2018, and the mohair slides from fall 2018. (Accessories, which tend to be more affordable, are oftentimes an entry point for young consumers.) âI waited a long time,â she says. Now she canât wait to mix the old with the new.
âI remember watching a Style.com video about her spring 2010 CĂ©line show and thinking, Oh, this is going to change the tides,â says Blythe Marks, 28, a vintage dealer and writer, who was a teenager living in Phoenix at the time. (She also collected CĂ©line images under the Tumblr tags âArt Gallery Ownerâ and âAGO.â) âBy fall 2010, you couldnât go anywhere without minimalism being the buzzword, and Phoebe was at the forefront of that. So I was intrigued from the jump.â
âIt gave [me] permission to be bold but also relaxed,â says Alexis Novak, 32, founder of Tab Vintage, of Philoâs CĂ©line era, from which sheâs since collected about 60 pieces. âShe humanized fashion, in a way, and made me realize that you can just wear sneakers and some cool tailored trousers and still be stylish.â Olivia Haroutounian, 24, a vintage dealer and TikToker based in Texas who collected Philoâs more âgirlyâ ChloĂ©-era pieces on Poshmark in high school, also found her CĂ©line look to be aspirational, yet attainable. âIt felt like the adult I wanted to be,â she says.
Beyond what Philo sent down the runwayâwhich evolved beyond minimalism to offer something more eclectic, yet equally wearable, by the end of her time at CĂ©lineâher personal style inspired a cult following as well. âI definitely bought a pair of Adidas because of her in high school,â says Eden Pritikin, 26, also a collector.
This bodes well for a line that, although backed by LVMH, has no heritage to live up to other than that of its founder. âI hope she does literally whatever she wants,â Marks says. That said, she still has some wishes: Given that Philoâs taken time away from the spotlight, âI would like her to address an aging womanâs wardrobe. What is sexy for women in their fifties and beyond that isnât being dictated by an algorithm or the fantasy of a designer? I started buying CĂ©line because I could see myself, as someone in my twenties, wearing it until I am [Philoâs] age, or older, and I hope she continues that.â
Philoâs younger fans have grown up along with her, and itâs the timeless, principled quality of her output that appeals to them, especially in todayâs era of rapid microtrends and empty buzz. Pretty much whatever she does, theyâll follow her to the end, Marks says: âEven if itâs just a good white T-shirt.â