Theyre the sort of pieces she might have sought out for her clients all people outside the entertainment industry. There is the multi-billionaire with a penchant for collecting everything from Bakelite jewelry to Dior Couture. Kauffman has amassed 1,000 distinct collections for her, cataloging, preserving, storing and caring for them, as well as creating accompanying reference libraries.
And the executive who handed Kauffman his black American Express card and said, Make my life beautiful. It was a task that involved custom designing his suits, decorating his houses and the interior of his plane, selecting his cars everything down to choosing the photos of his wife and children to go on his desk.
Then there is the housewife who wanted an unforgettable birthday present for her husband 50 extraordinary gifts for 50 extraordinary years. The goodies Kauffman came up with included a Picasso, a new wardrobe, a vintage Patek Philippe clock and a trip to Las Vegas on a private plane with $25,000 worth of poker chips inside.
She developed a style questionnaire to help get to know her clients, but has used it only once just seeing them is usually enough. If I got a visual on them, I pretty much knew by the end of the meeting what to do, she says. And being allowed into their personal space helped.
Examples of Kauffman’s personal style at home. (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
In the beginning, Kauffman remembers, it was difficult having so many pretty things around her. She would buy something for a client and something for herself.
I wont say I was jealous; I was envious. Sometimes just having it in my house for 24 hours, because I would bring things home and then deliver them to clients, I was able to say, OK, Im done with it. But it definitely fueled my desire for more stuff, and I definitely amassed more stuff than any person needs in the eight years I did this level of personal shopping. At the height of her business, she employed three full-time assistants, more during the holidays when she was in charge of gift-giving for her 11 clients.
Its easy to see how her business got rolling. There is something intoxicating about Kauffmans personal style shes a more eccentric version of Martha Stewart. In her house, she transformed a basic IKEA mirror into a showpiece with a glue gun and some seashells, and an IKEA desk into an Art Deco accessory with a little glitter, paint and a traced Erté design. She strung the coral chandelier in her dining room herself and put a disco ball in her fireplace.
Her closet is full of high-drama clothes jeweled Tory Burch tunics, a vintage 1920s gown that makes her look as if she were tattooed in gold, she says, and a gorilla fur jacket bought from a showgirl in Las Vegas for $200.
A chandelier customized by Raven Kauffman hangs in her L.A. dining room. (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
The daughter of a knitwear designer and an interior decorator, Kauffman, who grew up on a farm in Pennsylvania, is inspired by historys rare birds (Diana Vreeland, Peggy Guggenheim, Elsie de Wolfe), and could just be one herself. It was Infinite Variety, a book by Scot D. Ryersson and Michael Orlando Yaccarino about Marchesa Luisa Casati, the Italian aristocrat who kept cheetahs for pets, and whose former home is now the Guggenheim Museum in Venice, that inspired Kauffman to become a designer.
While reading it for the sixth or seventh time, she had a dream of a womans hands holding a notebook and turning the pages. On each page was a different handbag. After she woke up, Kauffman used every scrap of paper she could find to sketch the designs, 16 total, which became her first collection.
Kauffman makes her handbags with exquisite materials including beetle wings and pheasant feathers. (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
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Her Rara Avis fall collection, $1,195 to $2,290, is her third. It is sold at the Church and Des Kohan boutiques in L.A., Tender Birmingham in Michigan and Kirna Zabete in New York, and can be seen at her website, www.ravenkauffman.com. Demi Moore, Dita Von Teese and Lake Bell are fans of Kauffmans creations, which are hand-crafted by artisans in Italy, where the designer oversees every detail, even pointing out the exact cuts she wants made in a stone.
Naturally, her personal shopping clients have been supporters too. Its getting hard to find something they havent seen before, Kauffman says. Everything is so homogenized, its splashed over a million magazine pages or so-and-so has worn it so they dont want it. But there are still people out there who want something unique. And luxury to me is uniqueness.
booth.moore@latimes.com
Many of Kauffmans clutch bags have metal plates with laser-cut nature motifs. (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)