Interview Secrets
Photo credit: Kim Weston-Arnold
"'When I was little, I would play this game where I would talk to people in order to see how much I could get from them without having to reveal anything about myself.'"
Photo credit: Kim Weston-Arnold
"'When I was little, I would play this game where I would talk to people in order to see how much I could get from them without having to reveal anything about myself.'"
Photo credit: Steven Klein
"I found the tech conference I went to really depressing. Everyone there was a brand whore. Is this what we are: brand whores?"
[Forbes]
This Girl is Made of Gunpowder and Lead. Women's Second Amendment Pink T-Shirt. BUY HERE--> http://t.co/y52JMhOQfi pic.twitter.com/jkj0b8Qbdq
— Sons of Liberty Tees (@sonslibertytees) February 7, 2014
"In certain corners of Manhattan, the bald look of the Brazilian has become déclassé, more suggestive of a naked Barbie doll or a reality television starlet than an organic lifestyle of cold-pressed juice and barre classes."
[NYT]
[via This Isn't Happiness]
Photo credit: AmuseBewbs
"As a stripper, I have scads of finicky little costume pieces that are forever getting lost, natch. I live in a shithole with inadequate closet space, and all my drawers are spoken for. Do you all have any creative ideas for keeping my two pieces in one piece, and my skimpy little pseudo-dresses unwrinkled?"
here's the back view of my one-of-a-kind @adam_saaks creation - need more pics of this one! #scissorgenius ✂✨✂ pic.twitter.com/2VGPweU9Q3
— jessica drake (@thejessicadrake) January 22, 2014
"The interview is in Russian, but you don’t need Google Translate to see what everyone’s so offended by. It’s the accompanying photograph of Zhukova sitting atop a black woman chair by provocative ’60s pop artist Allen Jones. Jones’ forniphilic chairs were a source of controversy during the height of their popularity in the ’60s, though it’s Buro who have amped up the cringe factor by selecting one of the few pieces that uses a woman of color."
[Styleite]
The next issue of V magazine features Kate Upton on the cover. It's a double cover, really. The top cover is a semi-transparent sheet with Upton's clothes on it. Peel it back, and Upton strips for you. The cover headline reads: "Why Can't Kate Upton Keep Her Clothes On?"
WWD:
"When asked about the cover’s title, i.e. why she 'can’t keep her clothes on,' the model offered: 'Because I don’t want to!'"
From The Cut's roundup of the most torturous shoes of all time:
"These metallic leg-cuffs bring the cartoonish features of anime and manga into the real world. The Japanese designer’s futuristic, knee-high hooves may appear flat, but the enclosed stilts’ similarities to a chrome pipe make any ankle movement futile. Occult glamour never did promise comfort or function, did it?"
[The Cut]
Photo credit: Madoff Productions
Fashion Copious asks an interesting question: Do only men work on Victoria's Secret video productions? Judging by this photo, that would appear to be the case.