michelabella Posted April 26, 2019 Posted April 26, 2019 Some 1998 outtakes by JairoGoldflusEstudio Quote
radolgc Posted April 27, 2019 Posted April 27, 2019 Ah, i am going crazy with these out-takes...i wish they could publish them, too...by the way, i am working on my gisele website again...hopefully it will be ready soon. Quote
michelabella Posted April 27, 2019 Posted April 27, 2019 I know what you mean about outtakes lol. but so many of them are so lovely. Oh thats great I always wondered what happened to your amazing website! Quote
Ewciolina Posted May 17, 2019 Posted May 17, 2019 SUBSCRIBER COVER: Source: @elle_spain Instagram Quote
BARBORA Posted May 20, 2019 Posted May 20, 2019 Vogue Paris June/July 2019 (Sport Issue) by Mikael Jansson Source: Gisele's IG Quote
sanja Posted May 27, 2019 Posted May 27, 2019 Madonna Austria 18 May 2019 no pages with her inside Quote
Ewciolina Posted May 28, 2019 Posted May 28, 2019 On 5/20/2019 at 7:43 PM, BARBORA said: Vogue Paris June/July 2019 (Sport Issue) by Mikael Jansson Source: Gisele's IG SMALL PREVIEW: Source: vogue.fr Quote
Umfã Posted May 29, 2019 Posted May 29, 2019 I found the result to be reasonable.Gisele has become a boring and repetitive character. Just because it is no longer an artificial editorial, incarnating the protector of nature, is already too good. Quote
michelabella Posted May 30, 2019 Posted May 30, 2019 wow @ vogue paris ! No one better for sport/beach issues than Gisele. Elle Greece cover Quote
Ewciolina Posted June 6, 2019 Posted June 6, 2019 GISELE BUNDCHEN SPEAKS FOR THE TREES Hair: David Von Cannon Makeup: Sil Bruinsma Manicure: Makisakamoto Gisele Bündchen’s home is like a mini-ecosystem: chicken coops, beehives, vegetable gardens, compost heaps. “I wanted my children to experience the same joy and connection to nature I did as a child,” says the supermodel and mother of two. “Activist” gets tacked on to a lot of job descriptions these days, but Bündchen was impassioned about the environment long before it was cool. She credits her Brazilian upbringing—she hails from the small town of Horizontina—with her appreciation of nature, and a 2004 trip to the country’s Xingu region with her eco-awakening. She stayed there with the Kisêdjê tribe and “got to see firsthand the problems they were facing because of the pollution of the river,” she says. “From that moment, I knew I had to do something. I’ve been advocating for social and environmental causes ever since,” including clean water, reforestation, wildlife preservation, and clean energy. “After all,” she says, “our survival depends on it.” In 2008, she and her family cofounded Projeto Água Limpa (“Clean Water Project”) in Brazil.Gisele Bündchen’s home is like a mini-ecosystem: chicken coops, beehives, vegetable gardens, compost heaps. “I wanted my children to experience the same joy and connection to nature I did as a child,” says the supermodel and mother of two. “Activist” gets tacked on to a lot of job descriptions these days, but Bündchen was impassioned about the environment long before it was cool. She credits her Brazilian upbringing—she hails from the small town of Horizontina—with her appreciation of nature, and a 2004 trip to the country’s Xingu region with her eco-awakening. She stayed there with the Kisêdjê tribe and “got to see firsthand the problems they were facing because of the pollution of the river,” she says. “From that moment, I knew I had to do something. I’ve been advocating for social and environmental causes ever since,” including clean water, reforestation, wildlife preservation, and clean energy. “After all,” she says, “our survival depends on it.” In 2008, she and her family cofounded Projeto Água Limpa (“Clean Water Project”) in Brazil. For five years, “we planted over 40,000 trees on the riparian margins of the stream and cared for the land until the trees grew strong,” which, she says, not only improved the water quality of her hometown but also helped restore its wildlife. Bündchen is also a goodwill ambassador for the UN Environment Programme, a role that has involved field missions to Brazil and Kenya. In January, she fired back at her country’s agriculture minister, Tereza Cristina Dias, who had called her a “bad Brazilian” because of her environmental activism. In a response letter published in the Brazilian press, she called out those who would look to develop the area for profit. “An immeasurable heritage [is] threatened by illegal deforestation and the squatting of public lands,” she wrote. “These, yes, are the ‘bad Brazilians.’ ” It was a potent reminder that you’d better think twice before coming for Gisele—or the land that she holds dear. Source: elle.com Quote
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