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Isabel Toledo Dies at 59; Designed Michelle Obama’s Inaugural Outfit

She described her work as “romantic mathematics” and was happy that her designs could find a wider audience through her work with Anne Klein and Lane Bryant.

The designer Isabel Toledo and her husband, Ruben, in 2017. “Fashion is every woman’s language, every woman’s tool,” Ms. Toledo once said.Credit...Scott McIntyre for The New York Times

Isabel Toledo, the Cuban-American designer who was revered by other designers for her ability to combine precise geometric construction with extreme grace — but who was known to most of the public as the creator of the dress Michelle Obama wore in the 2009 inaugural parade — died on Monday at a hospital in Manhattan. She was 59.

The cause was breast cancer, her husband, the artist Ruben Toledo, said.

“I knew that what I wore to my husband’s first inauguration would go down in history,” Mrs. Obama wrote in an email, “so I wanted something that would not only live up to the moment, but would also stand up to the freezing cold of that January day.

“With her incredible creativity and masterful talent, Isabel designed a beautiful lemongrass outfit that I just loved,” she continued. “She more than met the moment — for that day and for all of history.”

Uninterested in the limelight or in logos, Ms. Toledo was a rarity in the modern fashion world. Devoted to fashion as a craft and an expression of self and embedded in the Downtown New York art scene, she was a throwback to a time before the designer became the creative director. She toiled away in a picturesque loft in Midtown Manhattan with Mr. Toledo, her partner since high school, dipping into the worlds of art, dance and theater for the sheer joy of aesthetic collaboration. They hung out with Andy Warhol, Jean-Michel Basquiat and the like.

Called a genius by Valerie Steele, the curator of the museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology, and a cult hero by Kim Hastreiter, a founder of Paper magazine, Ms. Toledo has been compared to the designers Charles James and Geoffrey Beene because of her obsession with construction. She described her own work as “romantic mathematics.”

“I’m not supposed to say I’m not a fashion person, but I’m not. I just, I love design,” she told CNN in 2012. “Design is so different than fashion. That’s why design lasts forever. It’s like an engineer. I love to engineer a garment.”

Ms. Toledo was the recipient of a National Design Award from the Cooper Hewitt museum in 2005, was nominated for a Tony for the costumes for the musical “After Midnight” in 2014, and twice appeared on the International Best-Dressed List.

In 2009, the museum at F.I.T. staged a solo retrospective of her work. But she was never snobby about her vocation, delighting in the idea that her work might find a wider audience through her position as creative director of Anne Klein from 2006 to 2007 and her collections for Lane Bryant, created at a time when the fashion world still largely ignored the plus-size consumer.

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At President Barack Obama’s inauguration on Jan. 20, 2009, the first lady, Michelle Obama, wore a two-piece lemongrass-hued ensemble designed by Ms. Toledo.Credit...Alex Brandon/Associated Press

“Fashion is every woman’s language, every woman’s tool,” she told Interview magazine in 2014 when her Lane Bryant collections made their debut. “My ideal happens to be diversity. I love difference. I love change. I love experimentation and eccentricities.” She also embodied her own ideals: Her favorite workout was twisting with a hula hoop.

Maria Isabel Izquierdo was born on April 9, 1960, in Camajuani, Cuba, to Felix and Bertha Izquierdo. She began sewing at age 8 because, she told CNN, “I couldn’t find anything I loved.”

She emigrated with her parents and two sisters to the United States, and in 1968 the family settled in West New York, N.J., where she met Mr. Toledo. She was 14 and he was 13. (His family was also from Cuba; they were in the same Spanish class in school.)

She attended the Fashion Institute of Technology and later transferred to Parsons School of Design. She left in 1979 before graduation to intern for Diana Vreeland at the Costume Institute of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

She and Mr. Toledo married in 1984 and were almost never apart, seeming to have the kind of transcendent love story reserved for Hollywood movies and sharing a look that made them seem as if they had just emerged from a vaudeville show drawn by Edward Gorey. Mr. Toledo survives her, along with her sisters, Mary Santos and Anna Bertha Izquierdo.

Also in 1984, Ms. Toledo introduced her own line. Its first appearance was at a Danceteria happening, thanks to the artist Joey Arias, a good friend who ran the events. Though she became an official part of New York Fashion Week in 1985 and her pieces were soon picked up by Barneys New York, Colette in Paris, Joyce in Hong Kong and Ikram in Chicago, among others, she never lost her affinity for the raw edge.

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Ms. Toledo at a retrospective of her work at the Museum of the Fashion Institute of Technology in June 2009. She also received a National Design Award, was nominated for a Tony and twice appeared on the International Best-Dressed List.Credit...Kathy Willens/Associated Press

She also remained at the head of an independent company, based a few floors below the couple’s home, which was a constantly mutating space crammed with plants, objects and ideas in progress, where the line between work and invention entirely disappeared.

“Isabel was a pure, uncorrupted fashion designer,” said Ikram Goldman, the founder of Ikram, who introduced Mrs. Obama to Ms. Toledo’s work. “She designed spectacular, innovative pieces that flattered every curve of a woman’s body, and she never conformed to or accepted the ‘fashion system.’”

Though that choice may have hurt Ms. Toledo’s business in later years, as fashion globalized and commodified — she stopped showing on the runway around the turn of the millennium when the cost became prohibitive — it also allowed her to follow her own muse. In doing so, she influenced a generation of designers.

“As Picasso said, good designers don’t copy — they steal,” said the designer Alber Elbaz, the former creative director of Lanvin. “Everybody sort of stole from Isabel. Her work was about volume, cut, experiments, a laboratory of fabric — and that was not an Instagram moment. It was fashion.”

By 2009, when Mrs. Obama chose a Toledo dress and matching coat to wear for her husband’s historic inauguration — a dress that was widely heralded as a triumph, and that helped frame the first lady’s signature use of her position to promote smaller American designers and celebrate the melting pot of America — it seemed the world had finally recognized Ms. Toledo’s gift.

In 2012 she published her autobiography, “Roots of Style: Weaving Together Life, Love, and Fashion.” The illustrations were by Mr. Toledo, of course.

“She was often marginalized by the trend-loving fashion business, but she never looked sideways,” Ms. Hastreiter wrote in an email. But, she said, “her rare gift of combining great design for all women (no matter economic class, shape and size) with flawless craft and astounding original creative beauty” meant that “Isabel Toledo will be in the history books.”

Vanessa Friedman is The Times's fashion director and chief fashion critic. She was previously the fashion editor of the Financial Times. More about Vanessa Friedman

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section A, Page 24 of the New York edition with the headline: Isabel Toledo Dies at 59; Dressed Michelle Obama For Inaugural Parade. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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