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spiral

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Everything posted by spiral

  1. spiral replied to dcrim's post in a topic in Female Fashion Models
    Calvin Klein, S/S 1988 VogueSpirit scan
  2. spiral replied to miss's post in a topic in Female Fashion Models
    ^It's nice to see her again in something new
  3. Hi MissP, Great to see you here. Those two models are gorgeous, but I don't know who they are.
  4. spiral replied to dcrim's post in a topic in Female Fashion Models
    ^Nice to see that Augustin has a new haircut. He's looking more and more like his mama.
  5. Runway shot from Atelier Versace's S/S 1990 show model: Yasmeen Ghauri
  6. spiral replied to dcrim's post in a topic in Female Fashion Models
    That's Domenico Dolce. Could it be that Linda's doing an assignment for Dolce & Gabbana? Or maybe it's just work for a magazine spread.
  7. spiral replied to Korravai's post in a topic in Female Fashion Models
    Lessons from the Stylish: Marpessa Hennink 49 year old model, and face of Dolce & Gabbana Alta Moda, Marpessa Hennink is the very model of balance. BY Lisa Armstrong | 06 August 2013 When a 49-year-old whippet-thin model tells you her big passion is cooking, your spam filter kicks in. But in Marpessa Hennink's case these two seemingly mutually exclusive conditions are probably down to her hitting pay dirt in the gene lottery. Even more radically, she still smokes, but although she manages to sound marginally remorseful about this unzeitgeisty state of affairs, her heart doesn't seem to be in it. Those looking for a nicotine-tinged moral will be disappointed. She looks fresh-skinned and clear-eyed. No one said life is fair. Before there was Cindy and Christy and Naomi - and for a while, during - there was Marpessa. An olive-eyed, gravel-voiced Amsterdammer whose mixed-race lineage left her feeling an outsider among her strapping, fair classmates but also made her endlessly versatile for fashion shoots, and one of the great catwalk prowlers. "Modelling made me so much happier about myself. Before that, I was like a black sheep and then all of a sudden in Milan it was 'Ooh bella'.'' For a time, she was ubiquitous. Then, in 1993, she bowed out. "Grunge killed it for me," she says, waving her cigarette as if to brush away a pesky fly. "I wanted to be in fashion to be beautiful and elegant, not to walk around looking like a junkie." You can feel her agent's anguish even now - walking away just as the big money began to cascade down the model chain. "Don't worry, I made plenty," she cackles. I get the impression she made plenty more "in retirement" in Ibiza, where she had her daughter Ariel, now 10, and established an idyllic-sounding life of haute hippiedom and lucrative property development. Doing up homes for affluent would-be bohos is sweet revenge for a model who for 12 years never had time to unpack, let alone hang a picture. Her life seems to have been a constant process of balancing and amendments. "My mum was quite a hippie and into sewing things and studying homoeopathy - and this was Holland in the Seventies, we weren't exactly at the vanguard of fashion. So when I got to Paris I really went for it, clothes-wise." She reckons she was the first model to dress the part off duty. Not that they were ever really off. By the late Eighties the supermodel culture was fomenting nicely; theirs was the fame that only requires a first name. She and Linda (Evangelista) were fashion-obsessed, trotting around in their Alaïa leggings and Chanel jackets. "We wanted to look as good off the catwalk as we did on. Before us models didn't dress nicely at all," she reports disapprovingly. "It's not supporting the business is it? I won't mention names but some, especially the American girls, wore the ugliest cotton knickers even to their fittings." Marpessa, for the record, wore La Perla and Hermès. "I invented the It bag," she laughs. She almost had an Hermès bag named after her - there was a collaboration in the offing but Ibiza got in the way. She is an intriguing contradiction of laid-back and fastidious. But so is her parentage: her mother, the world's "strictest hippie", her father, a tailor "who used to go mad if he saw me up a ladder paint-stripping a wall in a Chanel jacket". Which would have been quite likely. She has around 17, at least two couture. She had "a particular relationship with Karl" when she was modelling. She doesn't mean anything romantic, unless you count the creative connection that flourished between the big models of the Eighties and Nineties and the designers. She was in at the beginning, when Versace escalated the fee wars by paying models $50,000 to do one show and Dolce & Gabbana paid the models in clothes. "Models had much more input then than now," she says. "The designers would listen to what we had to say during the fittings and sometimes they'd change the clothes because of it." And sometimes they wouldn't. "Then you'd have to wear something hideous on the catwalk and just pretend it was fabulous." Apart from her hair, which she says she can never get right herself, she's abnormally low-maintenance - no exercise, no special beauty tips, apart from total sunblock 364 days a year and one intriguing exercise she shows me to lift your boobs (smile downwards, flex your cheeks upwards, ladies, and feel the burn). She's a compelling argument for not messing around with injectibles. In Ibiza she floated around in sun dresses (by her friend Yvonne Sporre who also decamped to the island) and lots of antique gold jewellery. She's wonderful at making things look effortless and as if they don't matter very much - it's the Chanel jacket-up-a-ladder philosophy. Secretly I think she worked quite hard in Ibiza, buying and selling real estate, as she calls it, engaging in the odd spot of modelling (she's been in Vogue more this year than at any other time in her career) and ensuring friends like Valentino and Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana had a good time whenever they came to visit. And then, last year, when Dolce & Gabbana launched its Alta Moda (haute couture) line, it offered her a job in Milan. When I ask her title she looks at me pityingly. "We don't have titles." If they did, hers would be something like "Person Who Takes Care Of Clients And Makes Wearing Alta Moda Look Easy". Because amazingly, wearing lace dresses worth tens of thousands of pounds without looking like a museum piece can be quite tricky. So can those clients, even though she diplomatically insists they're a breeze. Perhaps they're simply in awe. Describe your style Anything from the Twenties, Thirties, Forties and Sixties. In the house That means Bauhaus and Bloomsbury. I get most of my furniture online. Clothes-wise I love romantic, feminine, flattering and I like to have my arms covered because they're a bit scrawny. A three quarter-length sleeve is ideal. What I don't like is extreme minimalism. It's extremely boring. School-run uniform White shirts from Banner in Milan and Capri pants - my favourites are by Alberto Biani. What I've learnt Dress to flatter. I like to look covered. There comes an age… but also it's about shape. I see a lot of young girls wearing miniskirts and they shouldn't because they don't have the right legs or bum for it. Sentimental hoarder? I used to be but then I began to get rid of things. I didn't want my daughter to be preoccupied with my past but then one day she came back from school and asked if I used to be a model - some of the mothers had Googled me. She's quite proud of my work now. Best buys Jackets. The one I wear most is by Dolce & Gabbana, the kind that gives you hips and curves. You can wear it to a big party or with jeans. Oldest items I hate the throwaway culture so I don't buy much high street. I've got cashmere going back 30 years. I spend money on it and look after it - in the machine at 30 degrees, lie them flat and iron the reverse. I'm a very good ironer. High or low maintenance? Apart from my hair, which requires professional first aid when I go out, very low. My big thing is tending my eyebrows and my must-have beauty products are Estée Lauder 's Daywear BB cream and a mineral sunblock. I'm very relaxed about growing up. source
  8. spiral replied to Evelyn's post in a topic in Female Fashion Models
    Looking naturally beautiful. Thanks Sexy. :wub2:
  9. Cosmopolitan Cover, March 1989 (bigger size) model: Lara Naszinski from VogueSpirit
  10. spiral replied to diplostabus's post in a topic in Female Fashion Models
    The body of all bodies strikes again! scanned by Doosia
  11. spiral replied to dcrim's post in a topic in Female Fashion Models
    Thanks Tito. Lovely collage of Meisel pics. It's funny that the modern-day fashion world is so shitty that it needs for a middle-aged retired model like Linda to stick around just keep things remotely interesting.
  12. spiral replied to dcrim's post in a topic in Female Fashion Models
    Thanks Tito. I wish it was in English instead of German.
  13. spiral replied to seshiru's post in a topic in Female Fashion Models
    During a fitting with Yves Saint Laurent WARNING: NUDITY http://s12.postimg.org/5zbyeiudp/T2e_C16_Z_yg_E9s7_HJ_Zi_BR8_NQYe_Zk_Q_60_3.jpg http://s23.postimg.org/h2qlsijwr/KGr_Hq_VHJF_FHh89m_SZv_BR7_Oic2_JQ_60_3.jpg from VogueSpirit
  14. spiral replied to Kate_23's post in a topic in Female Fashion Models
    At Perry Ellis in 1992 from VogueSpirit
  15. spiral replied to dcrim's post in a topic in Female Fashion Models
    Ralph Lauren ads, 1990 VogueSpirit scans
  16. spiral replied to Mélange's post in a topic in Female Fashion Models
    Tehen ad, 1990 VogueSpirit scan
  17. spiral replied to seshiru's post in a topic in Other Females of Interest
    On the runway for Christian Lacroix
  18. spiral replied to Sweet rus's post in a topic in Female Fashion Models
    Ugh, such a stunningly beautiful woman. It's so rare to see an actual classic beauty in today's fashion world amidst a sea of unattractive, awkward, and masculine models.
  19. spiral replied to dcrim's post in a topic in Female Fashion Models
    Speaking of Brad Goreski, he recently purchased the famous "bathtub" picture of Linda, Christy, and Naomi from 1990. http://www.eonline.com/news/428674/what-s-trending-with-brad-goreski
  20. spiral replied to diplostabus's post in a topic in Female Fashion Models
    On the runway for Jean-Paul Gaultier's autumn/winter 1992 show scanned by Doosia
  21. spiral replied to plant's post in a topic in Female Fashion Models
    ^Great body
  22. spiral replied to magic's post in a topic in Female Fashion Models
    ^Thanks Sexy. I love Dana.
  23. spiral replied to dcrim's post in a topic in Female Fashion Models
    ^thanks Sexy. It turns out that celebrity stylist-to-the-stars Brad Goreski is a major fan of Linda. Here's a link to a video of him at this year's CFDA awards saying that the person he was looking forward to seeing there is Linda. He says: "She's the be-all and end-all for me." http://www.popsugar.com/Brad-Goreski-Deborah-Lloyd-2013-CFDA-Awards-Video-30701302
  24. spiral replied to seshiru's post in a topic in Female Fashion Models
    Gorgeous Cosmo covers. Thanks Sexy.
  25. spiral replied to miss's post in a topic in Female Fashion Models
    ^Wow what a striking cover. :wub2: