![]() For her Fall/Winter 2017 fashion show, Haart constructed a "La Perla Manor" runway show, in which Naomi Campbell, Lindsey Wixson, Sasha Pivovarova and Kendall Jenner walked. At La Perla, Haart created the first stretch Leavers lace, and launched a collection of ready-to-wear lingerie with built-in support. įollowing her appointment as Creative Director of La Perla, Haart launched a new approach to ready-to-wear for the company. The same year, she was named as the creative director for the brand by Silvio Scaglia, at that time owner and president of the brand. In 2016, Haart collaborated with La Perla for their Spring and Fall 2016 accessory collections. She partnered with a ski boot engineer and a German company that creates a gel used by NASA to create a comfortable high-heeled shoe. Īfter leaving the Haredi community in 2013, Haart founded a shoe company, Julia Haart, with the goal to make shoes that were both fashionable and comfortable. For years, Haart secretly sold life insurance. Throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, Haart worked as a Judaic Studies teacher at Yeshiva Atlanta "staff who knew her at the time – when she went by the name Talia Hendler – recalled that she was beloved by students and known for her sharp style". The last name Haart is derived from her maiden name, Leibov, which is similar to Lev, Hebrew for "heart". After leaving the community, she took on the name Julia Haart. ![]() Haart also dealt with mental-health issues, telling the Los Angeles Times in an interview that before leaving the community, she had contemplated suicide, but worried about how the stigma within the Haredi community would affect her children's shidduch prospects. They were doing to her what they had done to me - trying to push her down and mold her into that flat person that they could disappear. In a 2021 interview with The New York Times, she said that her daughter "just wouldn't conform. The treatment of her younger daughter, Miriam, bothered her in particular. While living as a Haredi Jew throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, Haart became increasingly uncomfortable with her community. At 19, she married her first husband, a yeshiva student, five years her senior. When she was 18, she changed her first name, "to the more Hebrew-sounding Talia, in order to attract a match". At 16, she taught herself how to sew, and read fashion magazines in her house. Haart attended Bais Yaakov Academy in Brooklyn, New York. When Haart was in fourth grade, they moved to Monsey, New York, which has a large Haredi community that appealed to her parents, as they grew more religious. In Austin, she attended private school, and was the school's only Jewish student. ![]() ![]() She and her parents left Russia when she was 3, and moved to Austin, Texas. Haart is also the subject and executive producer of the Netflix miniseries My Unorthodox Life, which described her 2013 decision to leave her Haredi community. She previously owned a namesake shoe collection, and was creative director at the Italian luxury house La Perla. Although she has claimed to be a "co-owner" of Elite World Group, a Delaware court ruled in 2022 that Haart does not own 50 percent of Elite World Group. She is the former chief executive officer (CEO) of Elite Model Management. Julia Haart (born April 11, 1971), previously Talia Leibov, is an American fashion designer, entrepreneur, and author. ![]()
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