The Insider Spot Where Celebrities Source One-of-a-Kind Vintage Pieces
- - The Insider Spot Where Celebrities Source One-of-a-Kind Vintage Pieces
Meg DonohueJanuary 15, 2026 at 9:00 AM
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Hollywoodâs Turning to This âItâ Vintage Seller Jesse James Thompson
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For Chandler Guttersen, everything has a story behind it. The reason she moved into her apartment-slash-showroom? A bad breakup. The apartment itself? Oh, it used to belong to Cindy Crawford. How this very story came to be? None other than Law Roach put her in touch with the ELLE team. Guttersen even wanted to know the story behind my own name, flipping the interview dynamic to satisfy the curiosity that is so integral to her business, Vintage Grace. This theme carries through to her very core: Fashion is storytellingâand storytelling is everything.
Through her work at Vintage Grace, Guttersen has provided pieces for celebrities like Dakota Johnson, Chloe Fineman, Justine Skye, Evan Mock, and Roach, who works with stars like Zendaya and Ariana Grande. When Roach saw a dress from Guttersenâs stashâa beaded Isaac Mizrahi number originally made for Kate Hudson in 2003âshe says he told her, âI know a major fashion moment when I see one.â
Chloe Fineman in an Alexander McQueen spring 1999 skirt suit provided by Vintage Grace. Conrad Dornan
To understand how the vintage curator got where she is today, we have to go back. After studying fashion merchandising at Texas Christian University, Guttersen worked in the fashion industry in various capacities, but never hit her stride. Feeling like she was floundering at the beginning of the pandemic, she reached out to her work mom and âfairy godmother,â Lisa Pomerantz, who formerly served as Bottega Venetaâs chief marketing officer. Pomerantz told her, âYou need to tap into vintage.â It was a lightbulb moment: Of course she needed to get into vintage. From childhood, her parents had taught her that clothes are meant to be cared for and keptâcherished, even. She still has Ralph Lauren sweaters that her mom passed down to her over the years.
In the spring of 2021, Pomerantz connected her with a woman whose own Palm Beach vintage store was closing. It was a match made in heaven. The womanâs kids werenât interested in âfinishing what their mother started,â but Guttersen certainly was, and she began building an inventory. âThe world brought us together,â Guttersen says.
Now her dusty-pink downtown ManÂhattan showroom is filled with racks of original Bob Mackies, Vivienne Westwoods, and AlaĂŻas. Itâs a fashion loverâs wonderland.
Guttersen wears a fall 2005 Chanel dress designed by Karl Lagerfeld and a Perry Ellis fall 1992 faux-fur coat designed by Marc Jacobs, both from Vintage Grace. Jesse James Thompson
When we meet at Vintage Grace, Guttersen is wearing the timeless pairing of vintage light-wash denim and a vintage YSL white button-down shirt, tailored to perfection. A gold Louis Vuitton trunk serves as her coffee table, and Chanel throw pillows adorn the couches. She keeps a circa-1939 Fortuny dress delicately wound, snakelike, into a box to preserve the pleating. To get a true sense of her discerning eye, you really have to visit the showroom. âIâd say 90 percent of my stuff is not listed online, because the magic is in person,â she says. âThatâs what I think is so lost in todayâs world, with overconsumption and the ability to buy so much for so little. Itâs whatâs special about vintage pieces. I could tell a story of how I sourced it, who it came from, or the collection and the designer at the time. I can tell you that, and youâll have something one of a kind.â
Of course, she still supports current designers. She adds two or three new runway pieces to her trove each year, including the pink hoop dress from Tory Burchâs spring/summer 2024 collection (which is now part of her personal collection). After all, there are no future archives without present-day purchases.
Red-carpet fashion has taken a turn toward archival pulls over the last few years, and the trend has lately hit an inflection point, especially with millennial and Gen Z stars like Jenna Ortega, Hailey Bieber, Kendall Jenner, and Keke Palmer. Guttersen understands why young Hollywood is so drawn to curated vintage ateliers like hers, which promise something out of the ordinary. âThereâs a lot of sameness out there,â she says. âPersonal style is pivoting from everyone wanting to look the same and having the same pieces to more individuality.â Guttersen finds fellow vintage wearers to be good company. âThey really respect the history, the preciousness, and the stories of these pieces. I know Iâm not curing cancer, but I share really fun, beautiful stories with people, and I make people feel beautiful. Itâs about allowing those memories of the past to live on today.â
This story appears in the February 2026 issue of ELLE.
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