In the 80s and 90s a Filofax was the ultimate aspiration symbol. The leather-bound refillable diary sent a social cue that you meant business. Just like the pager or the brick phone, it told people ...
The Filofax, one of the ultimate symbols of yuppie aspiration, is back, according to retailers who reported sales of the personal organiser have taken off after finding favour with women. It is the ...
In the 1980s, no self-respecting mover and shaker would be seen dead without a personal organiser — and that meant the Filofax. Loose-leaf pages were snapped into a smart leather binder the size of a ...
It’s like the 1980s never ended. Electropop rules the airwaves, rolled-up jacket sleeves are de rigueur, Torvill and Dean are on the telly and the Tories have a spring in their step once again. But ...
Back in the 1980s and early 1990s the Filofax was de rigueur for execs who wanted to be seen to be going places. But while it was a symbol it was also a useful tool. It combined a replaceable diary ...
As much a part of the 1980s as huge, clunky mobile phones and shoulder pads, the Filofax is a product that you might expect to have been quietly consigned to the bargain bin before being fully exiled ...
At the height of its popularity the personal organiser was sold in more than 40 countries and the business was valued at more than £30million. Film director Woody Allen was said to own 20 of them ...
I miss my Filofax datebook, with its six rings and dark red leather binder. I had a green one first, with a calendar that cast each week across two cream-colored pages. Back then, at age 30, I was not ...
For a few years in the mid-1980s, the leather-bound Filofax diary and address book was a coveted fashion accessory, displayed in posh department stores from London to Tokyo. That fad was largely the ...
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