The Incredible Success Stories of Calvin Klein | Redefining Fashion
He was addicted, bankrupt, and everyone said he was finished. Then he built a $9 billion brand.
A wrong elevator button led to a $9 billion fashion empire.
Calvin Klein was 25 years old.
Working dead-end design jobs in Manhattan’s garment district for six years.
Sketching coats in a cramped hotel room.
His entire life savings? $10,000 borrowed from his childhood friend Barry Schwartz.
Everyone had doubts.
“You’re just another designer in New York.”
“The fashion industry will eat you alive.”
“You don’t have the connections.”
He didn’t listen.
Here’s what Klein knew that everyone else missed:
Getting started matters more than getting it perfect.
So in 1968, he rented a tiny workspace in the York Hotel and started making coats.

Six coats.
Three dresses.
That was his entire collection.
Then fate stepped in.
A merchandise manager from Bonwit Teller got off the elevator on the wrong floor.
Saw Klein’s small workshop by accident.
Walked in.
And placed a $50,000 order.
Klein had projected $50,000 for the entire year.
He called Barry: “Are you sitting down?”
Barry asked, “Who is Bonwit Teller?”
That’s the grocery business versus the fashion business.
Within a year, Klein was on the cover of Vogue.
But success almost destroyed him.
By the late 1970s, Klein was partying at Studio 54 every night.
Cocaine.
Alcohol.
Valium.
Living the high life while his personal life crumbled.
His daughter was kidnapped in 1978.
He paid $100,000 ransom. 
She came back, but the trauma stayed.
Then the 1980s hit.
Klein designed a pair of tight jeans.
Put a 15-year-old Brooke Shields in front of a camera.
“You want to know what comes between me and my Calvins? Nothing.”
The ads were banned from TV.
Critics called them inappropriate.
He sold 200,000 pairs of jeans in the first week.
But by 1988, Klein was spiraling.
Addicted to vodka and Valium.
Missing work.
His empire was collapsing.
He checked himself into Hazelden rehab in Minnesota for 31 days.
Came out facing bankruptcy.
Everyone said it was over.
“He burned too bright.”
“The fashion world has moved on.”
“You can’t come back from that.”
Then his friend from the Studio 54 days saved him.
David Geffen invested money into Klein’s company.

Gave him advice.
Told him to stop manufacturing and focus on what he actually did well: design and marketing.
Klein listened.
He reinvented the company.
Launched CK underwear.
Put Mark Wahlberg in those famous ads.
Made Kate Moss a supermodel.
Created fragrances like Obsession and Eternity that became cultural icons.
And then in 1992, when the company faced bankruptcy again, Geffen came back with another investment to keep things going.
Klein didn’t just survive.
He rebuilt.
In 2003, he sold Calvin Klein Inc. for $700 million.
Today, the brand generates $9 billion in global retail sales every year.
Nine. Billion. Dollars.
All because a 25-year-old with six coats and a borrowed $10,000 refused to quit.
All because a buyer got off on the wrong floor.
All because a man who hit rock bottom twice decided to get back up.
What elevator door are you waiting for?
What lucky break are you hoping will find you while you’re hiding in your hotel room?
Klein didn’t wait for opportunity.
He set up shop and let opportunity walk through the door.
He got addicted.
Lost control.
Almost lost everything.
Twice.
And he came back.
Twice.
Because he understood something most people don’t.
The only real failure is giving up.
Your worst moment might be the setup for your greatest comeback.
Your rock bottom might be the foundation for something better.
Stop waiting for the right moment.
Start making things.
Put yourself where opportunity can find you.
And when you fall, get back up.
That’s the only strategy that works.
That’s how you build something that lasts.
Think Big
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