Archive for September 11th, 2008

Not-quite-so-thin is in for models at Fashion Week

coco rocha
NEW YORK (AP) — If model thin is always in, at least there were fewer protruding collar bones and ribs to be counted at New York Fashion Week.
Models were up to sizes 2 and 4 — not 0, according to Nian Fish, chair of a fashion designers health initiative. Designers rejected prepubescent 13-year-olds. And at least one super-thin model who had the audience talking a few seasons ago was noticeably absent.
“I think a lot of the direction from the designers has been a much healthier approach,” said James Aguiar, co-host of Ultra HD’s “Full Frontal Fashion,” who noticed more curves and smiles on the runway.
Avril Graham, executive fashion and beauty editor at Harper’s Bazaar, also saw a healthier look and more diversity: “We’re obviously going through a season of a less cookie cutter look.”
That is a small relief to those who have brought attention to the cause of eating disorders in the fashion world, though many say there’s a long way to go.
“I saw a few that looked better,” said Finola Hughes, host of “How Do I Look?” on the Style Network. “I actually saw some breasts, which was great. But there was one show I went to and everyone looked really skinny.”
The question of how thin is too thin has been tossed around since Kate Moss made her modeling debut 20 years ago, ushering in an era of “heroin chic.” In 2006, at least two models died from complications linked to eating disorders, which prompted some in Europe to try to ban skinny models from the runway.
Efforts were more modest in the United States. The Council of Fashion Designers of America held workshops on eating disorders and recommended that designers keep models under 16 off the runway, offer healthier snacks backstage and require those identified as having an eating disorder to seek professional help if they want to continue modeling.
“I think there’s progress,” said Fish, creative consultant for KCD Worldwide, which produces fashion shows and events. “The girls are still slim. We didn’t want them not to be slim. We wanted a projection of health.”
Some critics consider the industry’s efforts lacking because they still let skinny winnies rule the runways — while the models suffer to become walking hangers.
As a new model at 15, Coco Rocha said she went to Singapore and lost 10 pounds in six weeks. When she returned to the U.S. she was so obsessed with food, she beat herself up over eating an apple.
“I’ll never forget the piece of advice I got from people in the industry when they saw my new body,” she wrote in an e-mail to The Associated Press. “They said, ‘You need to lose more weight. The look this year is anorexia. We don’t want you to be anorexic but that’s what we want you to look like.’”
Rocha is one of the few models to speak out about the issue, even as ultra-thin models find their way into pro-anorexia “Thinspiration” videos. The question isn’t just about model health; it’s about who will win the hearts and minds of the teenagers and young girls who look up to them.
Young girls can now see more realistic shapes on television, from the Dove Campaign for Real Beauty to the plus-size winner on “America’s Next Top Model.” And models have largely disappeared from the covers of magazines, replaced by celebrities who generate their own is-she-too-thin headlines.
But that doesn’t mean models aren’t influencing girls and women.
Carol Weston, advice columnist for Girls’ Life Magazine, said she gets letters from tween girls who want to models or are looking for weight-loss advice. Modeling “seems so glamorous,” she said. She said many teenagers confess that they starve themselves, purge or use diet pills.
Eating disorders groups have recommended requiring adult models to have a body mass index of at least 18.5 — the lower limits of a normal weight — and an independent medical certification affirming that they do not suffer from an eating disorder.
“They do drug testing for sports. Why? To keep competition clean but hopefully also to save lives. That’s what we want, too,” said Lynn Grefe, CEO of the National Eating Disorders Association.
But such measures are called Draconian by Dr. Susan Ice, a medical director for an eating disorders treatment center and member of the Council of Fashion Designers of America health initiative.
For now, the goal is simply to raise awareness, said CFDA president Diane von Furstenberg.
“I think that it’s a good thing to do it the way we’re doing it as opposed to throwing those poor girls on a scale and terrifying them even more,” she said.
Because of the initiative, some models were identified as having an eating disorder, referred for treatment and are back on the runways, Fish said. Some who didn’t look healthy weren’t used.
There has been some pressure for designers to increase their model size to a 6, but the designers prefer models whose modest curves don’t compete with the clothes, Fish said. London recently dropped its plan to require medical exams for models because of a lack of international support.
“Thin is going to be the ruling look — until someone says, ‘I want voluptuous,’” said Fish. “I don’t know if that ever is going to come back.”
source: Associated Press

Add comment September 11th, 2008

A new campaign for Laetitia Casta

laetitia casta hot
HAVING DONE HER DASH WITH L’Oréal Paris, French-born model Laetitia Casta has been moved within the group to the Ralph Lauren Fragrances division, and will front its campaign for its new line, Notorious.
The new campaign has been photographed by Michael Thompson and the commercial film has been directed by Wong Kar-Wai.
While the news of Casta’s appointment has been around for months, this is the first official announcement from the L’Oréal group.
‘Laetitia’s glamour, daring and powerful femininity make her the perfect face for this seductive fragrance,’ says Guillaume de Lesquen, President, Worldwide, Ralph Lauren Fragrances, in a press release. ‘She is classically beautiful, but lives her life in a completely modern way. Laetitia is Notorious.’
Casta was discovered at age 15 in Corsica by a talent scout, and persuaded her parents to move to Paris so she could pursue her modelling career. Her natural, youthful looks and curvy figure have seen her model widely in France—she was a favourite of Elle and Marie Claire—and is easily one of the country’s best known in the industry. She is recorded as measuring 5′6?” (1·69 m) in height.
In 1993, she signed with Guess Jeans for a successful advertising campaign, and in 1996, became one of Victoria’s Secret’s models.
She crossed over into acting in 1999 with Astérix et Obélix contre C?sar, though her role was relatively minor. She gained more critical attention in La bicyclette bleue in 2000. She has continued to achieve higher goals in her acting career and will appear on stage in Elle t’attend at the Théâtre Madeleine in Paris this month.
In 2000, Casta was named as Marianne, the French face of womanhood—such praise may well earn her the tag of supermodel in some people’s eyes. She may well qualify: she is recognized by those outside the fashion world, and her first name alone does signify who she is. In earning terms, she is well behind Gis?le Bündchen and Heidi Klum but it is profile that determines whether the super- prefix applies. Until recently she even overshadowed Carla Bruni.
Lucire’s earlier impressions of Casta were less stellar in her earlier years, as she tended to stick to the script in interviews and getting across the sponsor’s message. However, most critics will agree that she has improved greatly in her acting career and her looks, as the new Ralph Lauren campaign indicates, have not diminished.
The Notorious campaign breaks this month in the US.
source: lucire.com

Add comment September 11th, 2008

Date Night Travel: You Can Lead a Supermodel to Dinner…

miranda kerr
Orlando Bloom directs girlfriend Miranda Kerr along through the crowded streets of London’s Mayfair neighborhood en route to dinner after stopping at the Maddox Art Gallery.
While the British-born Bloom reportedly just signed on to star in a Hong Kong remake of the French heist movie “Le cercle rouge,” his Australian girlfriend, a Victoria’s Secret Angel, is writing an inspirational self-help book.
It may be too late for you to jumpstart your modeling career, but at least you can feel good about something. We’re hoping it’s called Date a Pirate!
source: jaunted.com

Add comment September 11th, 2008


Follow us!

follow us on twitter!


Calendar

September 2008
M T W T F S S
« Aug   Oct »
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930  

News by Month


News by Category



digged 2744042 times