Friday, 6 May 2011

MODEL MOMENT: SASKIA DE BRAUW

Saskia de Brauw in her own words: ‘a sensitive, worrisome, strong and observant thinker’.

Every season, one girl stands out among the sea of new faces. And this time around, that face isn't that new at all - in fact, this is girl of the moment, Saskia de Brauw's second innings as a professional model. The hauntingly androgynous 29 year old (yep, that's 29) first started modelling aged 16 in Europe, before quitting and returning home to Amsterdam to study visual arts.

After graduating and making ends meet with waitressing, an old modelling pal convinced her to give fashion another go.On reflection, that was probably a pretty smart decision, given that de Brauw is currently enchanting the fashion world with her striking looks and equally fascinating personality (more on that below.)

Shot by Dancian for i:D

 Firstly, her star is currently burning bright in the world of fashion editorials. She is a muse of Nicholas Ghesquiere and a close friend of Riccardo Tisci (they bonded over their mutual love of art). Carine Roitfeld selected de Brauw for her last ever cover at Vogue Paris - and roped in Mert & Marcus to produce the surprising camera-still shot.


Because, y'know, one Vogue cover a month isn't enough for some people, de Brauw also appeared on the cover of the Vogue Italia March edition - shot by Steven Meisel, and looking completely different. This girl is something of a chameleon.


Then of course, there are the stunning campaigns; she looks incredibly strong in the shots for Givenchy SS11, and replaced Lara Stone as the face of Eres.

Shot by Mert and Marcus

Shot by Viviane Sassen

Saskia stands out; not only for her statuesque, unusual appearance, but because this model has an awful lot going on upstairs. Her creativity and knowledge of the visual arts informs her work, and when she is not posing for the world's greatest photographers, she is producing artwork with her documentary photographer boyfriend, Vincent van de Wijngaard. The Cut blog asked her to describe her artistic process:

"I do not work in one particular medium. My work is in its base conceptual. I use different media depending on the project I work on. My work is about the way people move through space and the traces they leave behind while doing so. These traces are often invisible. I like to make these invisible traces visible through my work. [For example] I did a work on daily routes of people in a certain neighborhood. I was curious where random people's routes would cross. These were invisible encounters to me. Everyday they would meet without knowing. I wanted to show these meetings to other people as well"


She also writes a beautifully poetic blog, documenting her art, and observations of the people and cities her work exposes her to. A small snippet, referring to Café de la Mairie in Paris:

"People keep coming in and going out. Waiters wear their classical black and white outfits. Lovers kiss softly. A grandmother a daughter and a granddaughter enter the cafe. Outside the light is slowly disappearing and the streetlights appear. People outside are smoking cigarettes and are lit by a reddish light coming from the upper floor of the café.

We finish our glass of wine and decide to have dinner here tomorrow."

Read more at http://sdebrauw.blogspot.com/  and keep your eye on this lady; she's on course to be the face of the year.

Images: DNA models. iD, Vogue Paris, Vogue Italia, Givenchy, Eres

Thursday, 5 May 2011

PREPARE TO GO KRAZY FOR KSUBI KOLORS

Posted by Fashion Junior at Large

It cannot fail to have escaped your notice that coloured denim is currently taking over the world. In every high street shop, the denim departments look like someone has had a happy accident with a box of poster paints. Royal blue, coral, yellow, emerald green, hot pink; think of a colour, and I betcha you can buy them in at least one retail outlet right now.

However, one label got there before everybody else, and that was Australian brand Ksubi, who first launched their coloured jeans back in 2004. For this summer, they have brought them back in an array of brilliantly vibrant shades, and are promoting the collection via a rather lovely film shot by David Askill (brother of Jordan)


The video features three lean n' lithe models, Bambi Northwood-Blythe, Cisco Gorrow and Heidi Harrington-Johnson (try saying that with a mouthful) wearing Ksubi Kolors and not very much else, leaping about in a barren urban landscape, having a bit of a set-to with some mean 80s muscle cars. Shot in slow motion, the cars billow coloured fumes and the models leap to superhuman heights. It's pretty mesmerising.






ksubi kolors from ksubi on Vimeo.

If the video has worked it's hypnotic magic on you, the Kolors are available in white, blue, orange, green, black, purple, red, plum, aged blue, aged green, aged yellow, aged black and aged pink (good luck to the indecisive amongst you) in store today at Selfridges and Net-a-porter

(Of course, there's always JBrand too, who have got their own delectable coloured denim range. Argh! Too much choice!)

THE OTHER ME

Posted by Fashion Editor at Large


Fashion pictures are not always just fashion pictures, you know. At their best they can be a portal to a fantasy inner world. One where the protaganist luxuriating in high fashion is you and the sensory delights conveyed in and by the photograph ramp up the imagination to super-eidetic levels.

My week has been decidedly blah, so when this email pinged in from Paris agency Cats and Dogs, which reps photographers, stylists and directors, the above picture by Sean + Seng spoke to me.

Right now I would very much like to be hanging with my fierce poodle in a dark, moody apartment having a fag (I gave up years ago) in my pink Jil Sander trousers waiting for my lover to get home.

Still, a girl can dream. And dreams are free (and waaay more interesting than tax and VAT forms)

stylist : Samuel François - hair : James Pecis - make up : Lloyd Simmonds
production : Cats & Dogs

OVER THE ROYAL WEDDING? OF COURSE WE'RE NOT!

Posted by Fashion Junior at Large

We are not even bothering to pretend that we are bored of all the royal wedding coverage; it was just too good to stop talking about just yet.  For those of you lucky enough to get your paws on a copy of this week's Grazia (apparently it's sold out now) make sure you spot the Fash Ed's contributions.

She got the lowdown from author Plum Sykes on what it is really like to wear McQueen for your big day:


She identified the tiara adorning that shiny, shiny hairdo (luckily we had researched all of the 300+ potential contenders...The Royals own a lot of sparkly headgear)


And Melanie called on her nearest and dearest designer friends for their expert opinions on the dress: 


That's just a snippet of an issue that required blood sweat and tears from the Grazia girls on Friday - spare a thought for them hard at work, whilst the rest of the nation partied!

Hopefully that will prolong your post-wedding good mood for a few more days.
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