[5] At age 10, Michèle was the first child to read The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, a close friend of the family.
[10] A contemporary press piece in 1968 ranked Rosier alongside Emmanuelle Khanh and Christiane Bailly as part of a "new race" of innovative and exciting young French designers, described as "stylists who work for ready-to-wear.
"[12] Rosier, herself a keen skier, produced particularly distinctive ski-wear whose streamlined design was in stark contrast to previous models.
[10] Other suits were made in quilted nylon velvet and vivid colours with detachable face panels such as the one featured on the front cover of Sports Illustrated magazine for 13 November 1967.
[14] She offered helmets with rotating green-to-clear visors (designed by Monique Dofny)[15] and her "stainless steel" and silver suits in nylon and lurex were described as "pure James Bond,"[7] and having "cosmic flair.