Kourken Pakchanian (1934–1991) shot for Vogue in the era when fashion photography was still an adventure — when a photographer could take a model, a cigarette boat, and a wardrobe trunk to the Dominican Republic and come back with twenty pages that stopped the world. Born in Lebanon of Armenian parentage, raised in Egypt, and eventually based in New York, Pakchanian became one of the defining visual voices of 1970s American fashion: the photographer behind some of Iman's earliest and most iconic Vogue editorials, as well as landmark work with Cheryl Tiegs and Beverly Johnson. The J. Paul Getty Museum included his work in Icons of Style: A Century of Fashion Photography, 1911–2011 — its most comprehensive survey of the field ever mounted, placing Pakchanian in the company of Avedon, Helmut Newton, Irving Penn, and Man Ray. Signed, numbered prints from his archive remain exceptionally rare. FATHOM's That 70's Style exhibition brought this work into the collector market for the first time, and the Gallery Edition prints available here represent some of the most significant fashion photography prints in the collection — produced to museum archival standards in our Santa Monica studio.