- In the 38 years since he started out as a fashion designer, Kors has designed for multiple brands, he's taken his own company public, and he's even starred as a judge on Bravo's reality series, " Project Runway ."
- Kors reached billionaire status in 2014, but most recent estimates put him closer to a net worth of $600 million today.
- The Michael Kors Holding Company made headlines in 2018 when it announced the purchase of Versace and changed its name to Capri Holdings . As of September 2019, Capri Holdings had a market cap of $5.78 billion .
- From a small boutique in his mother's basement to luxury retail shops around the world, here's how the designer rose to fashion industry stardom and reached billionaire status, and what he's up to now.
- Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.
How fashion icon Michael Kors turned a small boutique in his mom's basement into a $5.78 billion global fashion company (CPRI)
Michael Kors closed out New York Fashion Week with his spring/summer 2020 collection this September. It was his 41st NYFW fashion show.
Michael Kors started designing clothes in his childhood and has since turned the passion into a global fashion empire that contributes to his current estimated net worth of $600 million as of 2018.
Getty Images / Rob Kim
Source: Celebrity Net Worth
In December 2011, Kors took his company public. It traded under the ticker KORS and was valued at $3.5 billion.
Richard Drew/AP
Source: Business of Fashion , 92Y
This was the biggest ever public offer in fashion. When fashion consultant, Fern Mallis, asked Kors what he thought about the business milestone, he answered, "Keep your eye on the ball, and you do what you do, and you do it well."
AP Images
Source: 92Y
In 2018, the public Michael Kors Holdings company which owned its namesake brand, Michael Kors ...
Mike Blake/Reuters
... along with luxury shoe brand Jimmy Choo ...
Spencer Platt/Getty Images
... announced a new acquisition: Versace. With this addition to its portfolio, the company changed its name to Capri Holdings.
Scott Olson/Staff/Getty Images
Source: Forbes
While Michael Kors is a clothing brand that has been around since 1981, its designer has a story that dates back to 1959.
Andrew Kelly/Reuters
His story starts in Merrick, Long Island, where he was born Karl Anderson Jr.
Keith Beaty/Contributor/Getty Images
Source: Telegraph , Michael Kors
In a 1991 interview with People magazine, the designer said he changes his name when his mother married Bill Kors. "My mother said, Youre getting a new last name, so why dont you pick a new first name?"
Mario Ruiz/Contributor/Getty Images
Source: Vogue UK
Kors attended Kennedy High School until 1977 when he started classes at New York Citys Fashion Institute of Technology. After spending nine months at the fashion school, he left to pursue selling his own designs at Manhattan retailer, Lothars.
Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images
Source: Patch , Harper's Bazaar
One day, while Kors was setting up a window display at Lothars on 57th Street, Dawn Mello fashion director at Bergdorf Goodman at the time tapped on the window and asked who designed the clothes. Kors admitted they were his and Mello then helped him develop his first line that would then be sold in Bergdorfs.
Newsday LLC/Contributor/Getty Images
Source: Business of Fashion , Vogue , "Scatter my ashes at Bergdorf Goodman"
In 1981, Kors started his eponymous brand. He showed for the first time on a runway in 1984.
Keith Beaty/Contributor/Getty Images
Source: Harper's Bazaar
Kors described his design aesthetic as a mix between Jackie Kennedy and Elizabeth Taylor saying his mom, Joan, was more like the former, and his grandmother like the latter.
Associated Press and Hulton Archive/Getty Images
Source: 92Y
Kors said that at five years old, he redesigned his mothers wedding dress. According to his brands website, he told her to ditch the bows for her second wedding, and she did. His mother, Joan, told ABC News that when Kors gave design advice, everyone listened.
screenshot via Hulu
Source: Vogue , Michael Kors , ABC News
But it wasnt all praise for the budding designer growing up. He told ABC News he was bullied outside the home and called "every name in the book."
Charles Sykes/Invision/AP
Source: ABC News
He said it was confusing for him growing up because he was so supported by his family at home, but when he wanted to sketch instead of play sports at school, the other kids ostracized him.
Caitlin Ochs/Reuters
Source: ABC News
Kors told ABC News that he wants to help kids going through similar struggles. He has become involved with the It Gets Better Project and hopes to help even just one young person whos struggling and let them know, "There is a light at the end of the tunnel."
Reuters
Source: It Gets Better Project , ABC News
Even in the face of bullies, Kors was true to himself and opened his first store at the age of 11. The designer told Mallis at 92Y that it was called the Iron Butterfly Boutique and it was in his mothers basement.
Daniel Goodman/Business Insider.com
"I was very crafty," he told Mallis, "so I made fabulous candles, I made whip-stitched leather bags, I made hammered copper bracelets ... I set the whole thing up in the basement of our house in the suburbs, and I invited all the kids from the neighborhood to come over and I sold everything in like a week."
92nd Street Y/YouTube
Source: 92Y
Kors also talked about having a mustard and chocolate color scheme for his Bar Mitzvah in the 70s. "Every decade has its good points and its bad points ... the good: Halston. The Bad: mustard and chocolate." He went on: "Down to the invitations, the yarmulkes, the matches, the tablecloths, it was a pretty insane moment."
92nd Street Y/YouTube
While the 70s were tough for Kors to think about from an aesthetic standpoint, the 90s were tough for him from a business standpoint.
Richard Drew, File/AP
Source: ABC News , Harper's Bazaar , Business of Fashion
He told ABC News that he had high expectations for the 90s, but a financial crisis hit his business hard and it was struggling. "It was a domino effect," he said. "And then the next thing you knew, it was all about nose rings and ugly. I mean, it was a trifecta of a nightmare for me."
Seth Wenig/AP
Source: ABC News , Harper's Bazaar
In 1993, Korss company filed for bankruptcy protection. An Italian company decided to stop selling Korss lower-priced line, and without that income, there was no other option for the brand, Kors told The New York Times. But rather than give up, he simply reorganized.
Seth Wenig/AP
Source: The New York Times , Business of Fashion
In 1997, Korss company gained an investor: LVMH. With both financial and business support from the luxury group, Michael Kors launched a low-priced line.
Bebeto Matthews/AP
Source: Harper's Bazaar , LVMH
As part of the LVMH family, Kors was tapped in 1997 to design for another group in-brand: Cline. He became increasingly known for his "luxurious sportswear," which he brought with him to the French label.
Stephane Cardinale - Corbis/Contributor/Getty Images
Source: CR Fashion Book
CR Fashion Book pointed out how Korss spring collections at Cline featured lots of beach-inspired looks.
New York Daily News Archive/Contributor/Getty Images
Source: CR Fashion Book , Racked , 92Y
In 1998, he became Clines creative director and has been credited with totally revamping the brand with his ready-to-wear.
Swan/Contributor/Getty Images
Source: Harper's Bazaar
In 2003, Sportswear Holdings Ltd. bought a majority stake in Korss company, and he left Cline in 2004 to give his full attention to his namesake brand.
Kathy Willens/AP
Source: Harper's Bazaar , CR Fashion Book
That year, MICHAEL Michael Kors launched which ran counter to the price point of his first label and actually continued to sell during the recession.
Ron Galella, Ltd./Contributor/Getty Images
Source: Harper's Bazaar
He also started selling accessories and perfume in 2004.
Eduardo Parra/Getty
Source: Harper's Bazaar
Also in 2004, Kors made a name for himself in TV when he joined the panel of judges on reality show, "Project Runway."
Donald Traill/Invision/AP
Source: Harper's Bazaar
While he was working on the show, Kors got married. In 2011 the designer married Lance LePere in Southampton, Long Island. The two shared a low-key, double wedding with two of their friends.
Demis Maryannakis/STAR MAX/AP
Source: 92Y
Kors told Mallis he was married barefoot in a black T-shirt and white shorts. He said that he and LePere got married on the beach, "jumped in a Jeep, drove to East Hampton, ate pizza at Sams, and went to go see The Help."
Andy Kropa/Invision/AP
Source: 92Y
Kors was married the same year his company went public. He continued to work as a judge on "Project Runway" until 2012.
Jason DeCrow/AP
Source: Harper's Bazaar
In 2014, Kors reached billionaire status due to the success of his public company.
Kathy Willens/AP
Source: Forbes
In 2015, the company was on the rise, generating a reported $4.5 billion in net sales.
Patrick McMullan/Contributor/Getty Images
Source: Business of Fashion
Just two years later, in 2017, Michael Kors Holdings announced they would be closing 125 stores. Sales and stock prices were nosediving but it wasnt an issue unique to Michael Kors, it was happening to more than two-dozen brick-and-mortar retailers across the US.
AP Photo/John Minchillo
Source: CBS News
But in 2018, the company decided to phase out the major discounts that became synonymous with its name. Business Insider reported that heavy sales were tarnishing the reputation of certain once-luxury brands like Michael Kors and made them less desirable.
Larry Busacca/Getty Images
Source: Business Insider
With the $2 billion acquisition of Versace, Capri Holdings is trying to increase its revenue and its reputation as a big player in the luxury fashion space.
Carlo Allegri/Reuters
Source: Business Insider
Today, Michael Kors the man is worth an estimated $600 million.
Andrew Kelly/Reuters
Source: Celebrity Net Worth
In 2018, he showed off his West Village, Manhattan, apartment during a tour led by Architectural Digest.
Architectural Digest/YouTube
Source: Architectural Digest
He and LePere spend their fortune on art, like this sculpture they bought at a flea market in France ...
Architectural Digest/YouTube
Source: Architectural Digest
... and the many photographs they have hanging on their walls. Kors said he has collected photography for more than thirty years.
Architectural Digest/YouTube
Source: Architectural Digest
His collection even includes a signed photo of Elizabeth Taylor.
Architectural Digest/Youtube
Source: Architectural Digest
The apartment features a sleek, modern kitchen, but Kors says neither he nor LePere cooks. He jokes, "Whats my favorite thing to make for dinner? Its reservations."
Architectural Digest/YouTube
Source: Architectural Digest
In keeping with his famously classic and chic design aesthetic, Kors says he loves having black bowls in his kitchen to fill with brightly colored things like lemons.
Architectural Digest/YouTube
Source: Architectural Digest
The designer has an affinity for black clothing ...
Architectural Digest/YouTube
Source: Architectural Digest
... and hes often caught wearing aviator sunglasses. He showed Architectural Digest his drawers and drawers of sunglasses, which he said most people tell him all look the same. "I know the difference," he said. "It makes me happy."
Architectural Digest/YouTube
Source: Architectural Digest
The apartment features the ultimate New York City luxury element: outdoor space. Kors says hes got a green thumb but admits he has a lot of help when it comes to his garden.
Architectural Digest/YouTube
Source: Architectural Digest
Kors keeps his roots close to him in subtle ways. He has a painting hanging in his dining room that nods to his professional growth "Its a 1981," he said, "the year I started my business."
Architectural Digest/YouTube
Source: Architectural Digest
Since those early days in the 80s, Kors has been building up friendships with some of the industrys most iconic leaders. And even though its now decades later, hes got a level-headed mindset when it comes to his industry: Fashion is "the right thing at the right time," he told Vogue.
George De Sota/Staff/Getty Images
Source: Harper's Bazaar , Vogue
See Also:
SEE ALSO: Behind-the-scenes photos of a New York Fashion Week show reveal what guests don't see, from models getting accessories glued to their bodies to last-minute changes
DON'T MISS: Peek inside iconic designer Karl Lagerfeld's life and career and see how he became worth an estimated $200 million.
JOIN OUR PULSE COMMUNITY!
Eyewitness? Submit your stories now via social or:
Email: eyewitness@pulse.com.gh