The Glamorous Life of Elizabeth Webbe Lunny

Between jetting off to fashion shows in London, Paris and Milan, overseeing the luxury division of The New York Times where she serves as publisher for its style magazine, T, and raising two children with her husband, Florida Tech alumna Elizabeth Webbe Lunny is one busy lady – but she still finds time for a little SoulCycle.

To get it all done she wakes at 5 a.m. for the indoor cycling class. Lunny then comes home to make breakfast and pack lunch for the kids. Next she hops on a train for the two-hour commute from her home in Connecticut to New York City for her job managing a publication that regularly features celebrities like Lady Gaga, Kayne West and Nicole Kidman.

Lunny takes a “break” from her day of meetings with staff, design teams and financial officers to lunch with clients from Christian Dior and Rolex. Typically she’s back home by 8:30 p.m. for dinner and time with her family.

Elizabeth Webbe Lunny
One of the many benefits of Elizabeth Webbe Lunny’s career is world travel.

 The Glamourous Life

With high-profile positions at Women’s Health, Harper’s Bazaar, Teen Vogue, Vogue, Women’s Wear Daily, Three Lions Entertainment and Conde Nast, you could safely say that Lunny is no stranger to the glamourous life.

“I’ve spent my entire career in the fashion and luxury world,” Lunny said. “It’s a fantastic world.”

But her vision, her passion and her determination actually all started to form on the campus of Florida Tech where her father, Frank Webbe, is a professor and the former dean of the College of Psychology.

The family moved to Melbourne when she was young and the campus became her playground. She knew the entire faculty, attended mass on campus and explored every inch of the grounds.

“I grew up on the campus and I loved everything it stood for,” Lunny said. “Life is kind of serendipitous. It leads you in ways you didn’t realize you would go.”

The FIT Difference

When the time came to choose a college, Florida Tech felt right.

“I chose it for the academics and the excellence, it was small, yet there was an international student body, so there was openness, sharing and respect of other cultures and religious beliefs,” Lunny said. “My only issue was that I wasn’t an engineer or a pilot.”

Known by many as a feeder school for NASA, Florida Tech has a solid reputation for engineering, science, and aeronautics. But Lunny gravitated to the College of Psychology & Liberal Arts, selecting humanities as her major.

“Humanities seemed like the best fit,” Lunny said. “I enjoyed literature and philosophy, history and civics.”

But just because she didn’t major in chemical engineering or aeronautics, the academics were still challenging.

“The school didn’t coddle and the standards were rigorous,” Lunny said. “The students at FIT were very serious about education and what they were going to do with their lives. They came in with the attitude that they would soak in everything, learn everything.”

Early Influences

Lunny loved everything about the school and cultivated strong relationships with her teachers, including history professor Gordon Patterson.

“He was one of the best professors I ever had,” Lunny said. “He reminded me of a Robin Williams in “Dead Poets Society.”

Patterson, who still teaches at Florida Tech, says he might know why he reminded her of Williams’s character.

“I have a vague memory of climbing up on a desk in class to emphasize a point,” Patterson said. “Liz is a gem; bright, enthusiastic and sincere. It was a pleasure and an honor to be her professor. She made going to class a delight.”

Lunny credits Patterson and other Florida Tech professors with giving her a sense of self-confidence and the belief that she could do anything she set her mind to.

After graduating Lunny knew it was time for a change of scenery and set out for New York City – the hub of fashion and style.

The Big Apple

Elizabeth Webbe Lunny didn’t know a soul in the city. In Connecticut, a friend’s sister let her stay with their family for a month to get her bearings.

She spent her days looking for work and eventually found a temp job as a receptionist for a barter finance company in the city. Lunny then found an apartment where she could afford one – in New Jersey. She signed a lease to share it with a roommate she had just met.

Then she got to work – literally working as hard as she could, never complaining or shuffling work on someone else – and was rewarded with a permanent position and three promotions in three years – doubling her salary each time –allowing her to move into the city.

Her advice for people trying to move up at work is simple, work hard and smile because those who succeed have similar characteristics.

“You didn’t complain, you pulled the long hours, you did the work and you developed really thick skin,” Lunny said. “I never complained. If I wanted to complain or I didn’t want to do something, I went home and dealt with it privately.”

Fashion Forward

Working at the epicenter of the fashion industry gives Lunny tremendous insight on what the next big deal in style could be.  She has a few predictions for the upcoming fashion season.

“I think what you’re going to see in fashion is a trend towards lightness and the celebration of life just because tensions are high in the political landscape, “Lunny said. “What you see during these times is designers embracing escapism and that could be demonstrated with a lightness and airiness, it’s how they channel that escapism and do their part to lighten the seriousness in the world.”

Elizabeth Webbe Lunny: Hometown Hero

Bino Campanini, Vice President of Florida Tech’s Office of Alumni Affairs recently honored Lunny with an Outstanding Alumnus Award.

Elizabeth Webbe Lunny
Elizabeth Webbe Lunny had the chance to visit with her Alpha Phi sorority sisters on a recent visit back to Florida Tech.

“Florida Tech is extremely proud of Elizabeth Webbe Lunny and her achievements in the world of publishing,” Campanini said. “She was a worthy recipient of COPLA’s 2016 Outstanding Alumni Award.”

Lunny is often asked for her advice on achieving dreams and finding success in life. She’s always happy to share her “secrets.”

“Take constructive criticism and turn it into something really positive. It’s the only way you’re going to excel and show that you have the ability to grow in the position you currently have and in something that you want at the next step,” Lunny said. “And at that next step, you really have to become the type of leader where people will follow you and believe they can achieve anything.

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