April 27, 20178 yr VOGUE PARIS - APRIL 2016 Photographer: David SimsStyling: Emmanuelle AltHair: Paul HanlonMakeup: Lucia Pieroni
April 27, 20178 yr VOGUE JAPAN - APRIL 2016 Photographer: Luigi Murenu & Iango HenziStyling: Anna Dello RussoHair: Luigi MurenuMakeup: Georgi Sandev
April 27, 20178 yr VOGUE JAPAN - APRIL 2016 Photographer: Luigi Murenu & Iango HenziStyling: Anna Dello RussoHair: Luigi MurenuMakeup: Georgi Sandev Hide contents SEE-THROUGH NUDITY
April 27, 20178 yr VOGUE JAPAN - APRIL 2016 Photographer: Luigi Murenu & Iango HenziStyling: Anna Dello RussoHair: Luigi MurenuMakeup: Georgi Sandev Outtake
April 27, 20178 yr VOGUE GERMANY - APRIL 2016 Photographer: Luigi Murenu & Iango HenziStyling: George CortinaHair: Luigi MurenuMakeup: Georgi Sandev
April 27, 20178 yr VOGUE GERMANY - APRIL 2016 Photographer: Luigi Murenu & Iango HenziStyling: George CortinaHair: Luigi MurenuMakeup: Georgi Sandev Spoiler SEE-THROUGH NUDITY
April 27, 20178 yr VOGUE GERMANY - APRIL 2016 Photographer: Luigi Murenu & Iango HenziStyling: George CortinaHair: Luigi MurenuMakeup: Georgi Sandev Outtakes Hide contents SEE-THROUGH NUDITY
April 27, 20178 yr CAMILLE OVER THE RAINBOW - 1 APRIL 2016 “I brush my teeth. But like, every day!” My friend Edie stares cheekily (literally - her notorious pink cheeks are glowing!) back at the German journalist who just asked if we could start the interview by hearing about her daily beauty routine. We both chuckle. Since you ask, I am using the word “friend” loosely. If we are measuring friendship in actual physical contact (and not, say, in time spent following said “friend” on social media, using average of Likes dealt their way on a daily basis to assess status of relationship), then technically I have only just met the girl sitting cross-legged on the sofa in front of me. That, is if you don’t count me shoving a front-facing cameraphone at her, as I ran around enthusiastically Snapchat-ing for @YSLBeauty at their Beauty Night Out. Hashtag selfie. Hashtag cringe. Hashtag social suicide if this girl is as cool as her devil-may-care punk hairdo suggests. So while IRL this is only my first second live interaction ever with Edie Campbell, I have already decided that we are to be great friends. And today I’m smitten. It’s not just the fact that we are clearly sartorial soul mates (check us out in our perfectly synchronised boyfriend jeans, functional flats and neutral knitwear). There is an ease about this wide-eyed babyface that you don’t come across very often in this industry. She is self-assured, sure. How could she not be? Hailed as the modern day Twiggy (“I don’t see it, she chimes in, maybe more -what’s that doll’s name in the horror movie?- Chucky, if anything”). She has worked with, bar none, some of the most influential names in the industry, becoming a muse to Tim Walker, Karl Lagerfeld and so on. These past few weeks alone, she has stared up at me from the pages of hundreds of editorials, scoring VOGUE covers quicker than it takes a normal person to polish off their entire stash of Easter Eggs. But perfume’s bad girl, the new face of YSL Black Opium Nuit Blanche, is also decidedly down to earth. A quality often attributed to models you might say. And though you would be right, I normally feel they only earn that rep because they are basically teenagers with well-versed effortless style and goofy personalities, who also happen to be alien-like bombshells. But it’s not just her ease or the fact that she is ferociously smart (she just got a first in History of Art from the Courtauld Institute, ranked first nationally in that division). Nor that she is belly-laugh witty (see: beauty routine tip above). It’s the simplicity with which she talks about her job that really made me fall in love with her. I brought up her passion for horse ridding (alas, I passed the opportunity to pretend I was from Horse and Hound mag). She explained that though a keen horsewoman, she would never have chosen to ride professionally. “It’s just too hard a career to make money from”. She then adds, “But it’s an ideal hobby for someone like me, you know, who works freelance.” One way to call your job when you’re a world famous supermodel. All I can say is, bravo YSL for picking the coolest chick ever to freelance in one of your most iconic campaigns. And for introducing us. Now, I’m off to buy a toothbrush.
April 27, 20178 yr So nice! She is such an amazing person and she is an excellent horseback rider! Love her thread here very much! Thanks for keeping it so well updated
April 27, 20178 yr 52 minutes ago, Sheila said: So nice! She is such an amazing person and she is an excellent horseback rider! Love her thread here very much! Thanks for keeping it so well updated Thank you Sheila I think Edie's amazing too, and hope she doesn't retire so soon
April 27, 20178 yr IMAGE MAGAZINE - 8 APRIL 2016 5 Things You Didn’t Know About Edie Campbell Smart, articulate, charming and beautiful… these days it takes a lot more than looks to be a supermodel, but as we discover in the April issue of IMAGE, Edie Campbell - queen of the insightful sound bite, is the perfect package. She’s not just a pretty face Edie Campbell has tried her hand at writing, contributing to Harper’s Bazaar UK and acting as contributing editor to Love Magazine’s 2014 autumn/winter edition. She also loves to read, “I don’t like biographies; I read a lot of novels, a lot of 20th century novels.” She has recently become a vegetarian, but she doesn’t follow a diet “I don’t follow a diet per se, but I’m conscious of what I eat”, says Campbell. “I’m a vegetarian, which is a new thing, so no meat, but there’s nothing else I don’t eat as such. I love chocolate. That’s my favourite thing.” Her signature hairstyle is definitely not effortless “I’m a bit lazy, and in truth, there are other things I’d rather be focusing on. My hair is definitely not effortless. It comes from a lot of time spent sitting in hair salons. My go-to hairstylist is Guido, so I love it when I might be working on a show that he’s on. I’ll get onto his assistant and see if we can cross paths.” She prefers a night in to a night out Her perfect night, she says, would be “with all my closest friends. We’d listen to music - a bit of disco and David Bowie - and there’d be dancing. It’d be chilled; in a big house with loads of girls, and it’d be fun.” She has an interesting take on the definition of beauty, considering she’s a model In Edie’s eyes, the definition of beauty is “the happiest or funniest person in the room, or the most interesting.” Full interview in the April issue of IMAGE.
April 27, 20178 yr LOVE CLUB x ITCHY SCRATCHY PATCHY LAUNCH AT DOVER STREET MARKET - 28 APRIL 2016 Dover Street Market (now in Haymarket) has recruited Edie Campbell and Christabel MacGreevy to man their LOVE Club x Itchy Scratchy Patchy market stall between 2 and 4pm tomorrow. Mandi Lennard caught up with them to find out if they plan to give it the hard sell. Mandi Lennard: Where’s the best place to stick an Itchy Scratchy Patchy patch? Edie Campbell: On yer bum! Anywhere really… Maybe somewhere prominent. I would recommend ironing it onto your face though. ML: How did Itchy Scratchy Patchy come to collaborate with LOVE? EC: I was working with Katie and the LOVE team on the last issue and we were having a lot of conversations about a kind of DIY aesthetic and something a bit homemade. Christabel and I had just started working together making patches, and it kind of felt like a fun opportunity. Especially as the issue is called the LOVE Club and a lot of the history of patches is about marking yourself as part of a gang. It kind of all just came together as a happy marriage. The issue is about clubs and nights out, so we decided to make them glow-in-the-dark; the word ‘LOVE’ glows like a happy positive beacon. ML: How did you both meet? Christabel MacGreevy: We were at primary school together. But we didn't like each other much back then. ML [to Edie]: With all your modelling jobs plus writing assignments for LOVE, how do you find the time to work on ISP? EC: I don’t sleep much and I occasionally have short-lived but dramatic meltdowns. But Chrissy and I keep each other up; when one is having a meltdown, it’s the other’s responsibility to be up. ML: How do you come up with new ideas for patches? EC: Kind of just intuitively. Chrissy and I email each other things we like all the time and then we just speak to each other about what we’re thinking or funny stories we’ve heard. It’s pretty organic. We don’t try very hard. The whole point of patches is that they’re not permanent. It’s not serious, they’re pretty light-hearted. ML: How do you feel about being a stall holder tomorrow? EC: So excited! ML: Will you be giving Dover Street Market customers the hard sell or will you be sucking sweets and hiding behind the T-shirts? CM: Hard sell! While sucking sweets. ML: Have either of you ever worked in a shop before? EC: I worked in a pub. That was the last time I worked a till, but I’ve never done shop work. I managed to escape that as a teenager. CM: I worked in a couple of shops after leaving art school. I worked at my friend Alex Eagle's store on Walton Street, which has recently relocated to a huge new space in Soho. excerpt from thelovemagazine.co.uk - 29 April 2016
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