I am a former assistant to Mr. Scaasi while he was making clothes for the fabulous Mrs. Bush. I would like to set the record straight and say he did not like women and that included the First Lady. He would use the cheapest fabrics for her. He always made her wait in the showroom as he arrived late for appointments in order to establish his "superior" position....she never, ever complained about being kept waiting. The stories of how he cheated his other couture clients are equally frightening. If anyone wants to know more, get in touch. I am on Facebook.
I am a former assistant to Mr. Scaasi while he was making clothes for the fabulous Mrs. Bush. I would like to set the record straight and say he did not like women and that included the First Lady. He would use the cheapest fabrics for her. He always made her wait in the showroom as he arrived late for appointments in order to establish his "superior" position....she never, ever complained about being kept waiting. The stories of how he cheated his other couture clients are equally frightening. If anyone wants to know more, get in touch. I am on Facebook.
Hi Fernando, I'm super surprised to hear all of that! I am having so much trouble identifying whether or not a dress I found with a Scaasi tag is real or fake. Could you please help me?
@@rebeccastevenson9963 Rebecca, chances are the dress came from "The House of Scaasi", although since 1980 he personally did not do any of the deigns himself.
@@ffshowcase Thank you💗 The dress has a pink tag which is what worried me, but I figured out that is because it is supposed to be a night gown/lingerie slip, and on those tags the "Scaasi" was done in pink lettering. It has a union label dated back to the 60's/70's, do you think he could have designed it personally?
Nice man. Great fashion design talent. He also worked in adult literacy. Rest in Paradise. 🌟🌤️🌥️
I am a former assistant to Mr. Scaasi while he was making clothes for
the fabulous Mrs. Bush. I would like to set the record straight and say
he did not like women and that included the First Lady. He would use the
cheapest fabrics for her. He always made her wait in the showroom as he
arrived late for appointments in order to establish his "superior"
position....she never, ever complained about being kept waiting. The
stories of how he cheated his other couture clients are equally
frightening. If anyone wants to know more, get in touch. I am on
Facebook.
I am a former assistant to Mr. Scaasi while he was making clothes for
the fabulous Mrs. Bush. I would like to set the record straight and say
he did not like women and that included the First Lady. He would use the
cheapest fabrics for her. He always made her wait in the showroom as he
arrived late for appointments in order to establish his "superior"
position....she never, ever complained about being kept waiting. The
stories of how he cheated his other couture clients are equally
frightening. If anyone wants to know more, get in touch. I am on
Facebook.
Hi Fernando, I'm super surprised to hear all of that! I am having so much trouble identifying whether or not a dress I found with a Scaasi tag is real or fake. Could you please help me?
@@rebeccastevenson9963 Rebecca, chances are the dress came from "The House of Scaasi", although since 1980 he personally did not do any of the deigns himself.
@@ffshowcase Thank you💗 The dress has a pink tag which is what worried me, but I figured out that is because it is supposed to be a night gown/lingerie slip, and on those tags the "Scaasi" was done in pink lettering. It has a union label dated back to the 60's/70's, do you think he could have designed it personally?
@@rebeccastevenson9963 In that case he probably did......and BTW, he had moments when he could be a very nice man!
@@ffshowcase Thank you so much! 💗 It's been so cool to hear from someone who knew him personally. You have lived a very interesting life!