By Karina Ivashko: Famous Russian fashion designer has become the chief editor of the first fashion TV channel which was launched in Russia last week. The channel’s goal is to help young fashion designers find their target audience, he says. Valentin Yudashkin rests high hopes on the new TV channel as a site for promotion of new designers. Tags: fashion, Valentin Yudashkin , Commentary, Culture, Russia, Читать далее, Source: Voice of Russia.
“Aggressive elegance” from Valentin Yudashkin
1920s fashion back, couturiers say
A model displays an outfit by Spanish designer Kina Fernandez during the presentation of the Autumn/Winter collections of the Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week Madrid on February 3, 2012 in Madrid. Photo: AFP
The Mercedes-Benz Week of Haute Couture is opening in New York today.More than 90 famed couturiers will be setting key fashion trends for the 2012 fall season. The 1920s fashion will be making a comeback, designers say, and deep-blue will oust black, grey and beige from the catwalks. Tags: fashion, Fashion Week , designer, Culture, World, News, Читать далее, Source: Voice of Russia.
Russia Fashion Week - Creations Of Slava Zaitsev
A model presents creations by Russian designer Slava Zaitsev at the Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week in Moscow, Oct. 18, 2012. The Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week Russia Spring-Summer 2013 show is held in Moscow from Oct. 18 to 22. (Xinhua/Jiang Kehong) Source: China
Models present creations by Russian designer Slava Zaitsev at the Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week in Moscow, Oct. 18, 2012. The Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week Russia Spring-Summer 2013 show is held in Moscow from Oct. 18 to 22. (Xinhua/Jiang Kehong), Source: China
Meet the teenage girl who has transformed herself into a living cartoon character

Living cartoon: Anastasiya Shpagina, 19, takes inspiration from Japanese anime
By KERRY MCDERMOTT :With her enormous, glassy eyes, purple hair and coquettish pose, this girl could have stepped from the scene of a Japanese anime film. Anime fan Anastasiya Shpagina has transformed herself into a living cartoon character, complete with miniature waist, vividly-coloured hair, and a defined pout.Originally from the Ukraine, the 19-year-old takes style inspiration from the cartoons andcomputer animations that have a huge following in Japan, and has even adopted a Japanese name - Fukkacumi. Anime characters often feature huge eyes and heads that are disproportionately large in comparison to their body. Shpagina, who is just 5ft2ins tall, is already reported to have 

Doll-like proportions: The diminutive teenager's 'flower fairy' make-up tutorial has been watched more than 150,000 times on YouTube
slimmed down to just over six stone in her attempts to resemble a living anime character, and is said to spend 30 minutes painstakingly applying her dramatic make-up to each one of her eyes. It is thought
Anime-inspired: Shpagina is said to spent 30 minutes applying make-up to each of her eyes in her efforts to perfect her anime-inspired look
Anime-inspired: Shpagina is said to spent 30 minutes applying make-up to each of her eyes in her efforts to perfect her anime-inspired look
Shpagina may go even further in her efforts to achieve her desired look, with some reports claiming she intends to undergo surgery on her eyes to make her resemble her anime idols even more closely.

Fans: The teenager has more than 10,000 fans on Facebook
The teenager, who has over 10,000 fans on Facebook, also posts videos on YouTubedemonstrating how she applies her make-up. One clip, in which Shpagina reveals to fans how she achieves her 'flower fairy' look, has been watched more than 150,000 times. Shpagina is not the first young girl to take style 

Inspiration: Many anime characters are drawn with enormous eyes and tiny waists
inspiration from the world of fantasy. AmericanDakota Rose - or Kota Koti - has been dubbed the 'real-life Barbie' thanks to her doe-eyed stare and dainty proportions. The teenager has amassed a global audience

Internet sensation: Dakota Rose - also known as Kota Koti - has been hailed as a real-life Barbie
by posting fashion and beauty tutorials on YouTube. Shpagina is not the first young girl to take style inspiration from the world of fantasy. AmericanDakota Rose - or Kota Koti - has been dubbed the 'real-life Barbie' thanks to her doe-eyed stare and dainty proportions. The teenager has amassed a global audience by posting fashion and beauty tutorials on YouTube. Source: Travelfwd+
Gwyneth Paltrow named World's Best Dressed Woman
Oscar-winning actress Gwyneth Paltrow has been named the World's Best Dressed Woman, ahead of fashion forward celebs like the Duchess of Cambridge and Rihanna. Paltrow, who will be 40 in a couple of weeks, grabbed the top spot in the list by People magazine and her stylist said the actress owes it to her secret - less is more, Daily Mail reported. The Duchess, 30, was just behind Paltrow on the list, and was hailed for her "flawlessly elegant attire". Hollywood actresses Emma Stone, 23, Jessica Alba, 31, the Kardashian sisters and Australian supermodel Miranda Kerr, 29, were also included in the list. Rihanna scooped the Best Risk-Taking Style Award and Kerr won the Best Street Style Award. Among men, honours went to actors Andrew Garfield, Brad Pitt, Colin Firth, Robert Pattinson, Chris and Liam Hemsworth and singer Jay-Z. Source: Screen India, Image: flickr.comMaterial girls: Japan's preteen model boom
Eyeing the prize: Young models on stage at Tokyo Top Kids Collection, which was held at Yoyogi No.2 stadium, on Aug. 1, 2012 (above and below). YOSHIAKI MIURA
By AYAKO MIE: AKB48 has reshaped the landscape of youth culture in modern Japan. The pop-idol group's rapid rise to stardom across a wide array of formats has provided the country's children with a fairly straightforward path to commercial success: fame is ultimately achieved by attracting a broad fan base via popular vote. Such a strategy encourages young people today to chase dreams of being in the spotlight that many Japanese would have shunned years ago. These days, long-term goals of careers in politics or medicine have been replaced with the need for instant gratification and glamour. Nowhere is such an ideal more apparent than in the fashion industry, and youth fashion, in particular, has undergone changes in the past five years or so that makes it virtually unrecognizable from its former state. The modeling opportunities that exist for preteens in Japan nowadays were certainly evident at Yoyogi National Gymnasium at the beginning of August. Almost 350 models under the age of 14 participated in Tokyo Top Kids Collection, competing for such categories as best fashion, best smile and best runway walk. Among the contestants was 12-year-old Suguri Shishikura, who was making her second appearance as a model and her first at Top Kids Collection. Suguri first became interested in fashion around three years ago after flicking through her elder sisters' magazines. Before long, she was slapping on her sisters' makeup and strutting around in various outfits of her choosing as she sought to find a style that she could call her own. Now, however, the balance has shifted and her sisters these days teasingly complain about being unable to wear any of Suguri's 19 designer dresses or her 12 pairs of high-heeled shoes. Being the center of attention on the catwalk doesn't come naturally for the shy middle schooler from Chiba Prefecture, who still asks her mother to tie her hair back in a pony tail before leaving for school each morning. Once she started striding down the Tokyo Top Kids Collection runway, however, she underwent something of a metamorphosis, and by the time she struck her final pose at the end of the catwalk, she was confident enough to break into a smile and bask in the applause of the thousands in the crowd who had gathered to attend. "Once I am on the stage, all my nervousness disappears," Suguri said. Suguri dreams of becoming a professional model, but competition is certainly tough and each of her rivals at the Tokyo Top Kids Collection are essentially eyeing the same goal. Web-based preteen fashion store Kids Online launched Tokyo Top Kids Collection six years ago in an attempt to promote designer brands for children. Held once a year, the show now attracts a crowd of around 4,500 — three times more than it started with. Visitors pay as much as ¥3,900 for a ticket to the event. "We were surprised that it grew so big," said Isao Toyama at Little Andersen, the operator of Kids Online and maker of popular preteen brands such as Earthmagic, Hysteric Mini and Chubbygang. "This shows that there is a high demand for such fashion." Over the past six years, however, the Tokyo Top Kids Collection has become more than just a commercial avenue for fashion houses to showcase the latest preteen trends. Nowadays, the show also serves as one of the primary testing grounds for aspiring children who wish to
Got the look: Suguri Shishikura, 12, at her home in Chiba Prefecture in July, shows off her fashion booty of 19 brand dresses, 12 pairs of shoes, and nine handbags. AYAKO MIE
become models, with amateurs who have never modeled before comprising at least half of the preteen models who take to the catwalk. Competition at the audition for the collection is fierce, with judges eventually settling on just 10 percent of the 1,600 applicants who wish to take part in the event. Many of those who don't make the initial cut try to make an appearance at the collection as an audience member on the off chance they might invariably catch the eye of one of the various modeling agency scouts who are also in attendance. "I have come to learn from other models in order to be selected to be on the stage next year," said 10-year-old Miyu Ota from Nagoya, who failed to make the cut this time around. Like a number of other preteens in the audience, Miyu was dressed to the nines. Her mother, 36-year-old Akemi, had helped her apply a subtle baby blue eye shadow that was cleverly offset by glittering lip gloss and a radiant pink hue that emanated from her cheeks. She wore a yellow and pink dress that completed "her look." Youth fashion has changed substantially in Japan over the past three decades. Starting with the subtle shifts observed in gyaru fashion (a girly-glam style that is often classified as a sign of rebellion) in the 1990s, youth fashion has evolved into the more commercially viable Tokyo Girls Collection, a semiannual fashion event that showcases popular streetwear by domestic brands. The emphasis on street fashion throughout the late 1990s and early 2000s helped create an atmosphere in which almost anyone could become a trend setter. Popular streetwear-oriented fashion magazines and television segments during this period increasingly featured so-called dokusha moderu (amateur models), or dokumo for short, who submit their own portraits for publication at the discretion of an editor. That trend has trickled down to influence many of today's preteens — and their doting parents. Nowadays, preteen girls are more than happy to trade in their Barbie dolls and other toys for makeup, designer clothes and blogs about fashion. It's certainly a huge market that fashion houses across the country are seeking to exploit. Worth an estimated ¥880 billion, top brands are increasing the number of production lines, collaborating with toy makers to create fashion-related games and launching their own independent fashion shows and auditions. Narumiya International is an example of a domestic firm that wants a bigger piece of the fashion pie. The children's apparel maker first made waves in Japan with the launch of its Angel Blue line, a brand that regularly filled the private wardrobes of idol groups such as Morning Musume in the early 2000s. The company's success, however, was short-lived. Consumers increasingly started to gravitate toward large-scale shopping centers in order to purchase clothes, effectively bypassing the department stores that Narumiya had forged supply contracts with. The executives of Narumiya realized they had to find new ways to attract and retain a loyal customer base, and therefore introduced the concept of an annual children's fashion competition. "Preteen fashion is a very difficult market to succeed in because it's hard to build a solid customer base with children whose body figures are constantly changing," Narumiya President Toshiaki Ishii said. "We also have to make clothes that are not too sexy, not too childish, and appeal to mothers as well." Narumiya's approach to 
Runaway takeoff: Aspiring model Suguri Shishikura (12, far left) makes her debut at the Tokyo Top Kids Collection. YOSHIAKI MIURA
hosting such independent collections is, perhaps not surprisingly, commercially driven. Anyone wishing to submit an application to join an audition must first purchase clothing items at related shops such as Lovetoxic, Lindsay or mezzo piano in order to get an application form. Last year, about 4,000 kids enrolled to take part in Narumiya's audition, and fans were encouraged to cast their votes online for the grand prize winner. Just 22 girls, including Suguri, were selected to represent Narumiya at myriad fashion shows across the country, including the Tokyo Top Kids Collection. Suguri and her mother, Reiko, typically go shopping together once a month. When pressed to choose a favorite label, Suguri said she usually prefers something from the Narumiya catalogue. "Oh my God, this is so cute," said Shishikura as she tried on a Narumiya denim miniskirt and a complementary white T-shirt at a Lindsay store in Chiba. "I love it." Reiko, who doled out ¥30,000 on her daughter's clothes that day, pointed out that they "feel loyal to Narumiya because Suguri was selected (to represent the Lindsay label)." Preteen fashion certainly isn't cheap. Elementary schoolchildren's interest in fashion and modeling was initially sparked by the success of a preteen magazine called Nico Puchi. Offering bi-monthly style and modeling competitions, Nico Puchi quickly became an essential bible for the nation's joshi shogakusei (female elementary schoolchildren), or JS for short. Each issue would be based around a specific theme — for instance, "back to school fashion" — and readers were encouraged to submit style ideas or send in images of an amateur fashion shoot. The magazine typically received more than 300 applications each month, and the editing staff selected around 40 to 50 kids to include in each issue as a model. And yet the choices that were selected in each issue invariably moved increasingly away from the streetwear that had been the mainstay of youth fashion in Japan until at least the mid-2000s. Trends became more and more decorative than functional in nature, moving closer toward the fanciful arthouse looks inspired by brash contemporary domestic designers such as Toshikazu Iwaya of DressCamp fame. And yet, the young female readers added their own individual touches to each portfolio. Kids posed for their shoots with huge Minnie Mouse ribbons tied in their hair or oversize glasses that had no lenses. They wore heels that were so high they could barely walk to the nearest convenience store, let alone all day in the school playground. Elementary schools, it should be said, also tend to frown upon pupils turning up to class in chiffon skirts and fishnet stockings. "It's hard to draw the line between reality and dream," said Nico Puchi Editor-in-Chief Takuji Yamamoto, who started the magazine at Shinchosha Publishing in 2006. In 1996, Yamamoto originally launched a sister publication called Nicola that catered to an elementary and middle school demography. However, he decided to exclusively feature fashion for elementary school children by concentrating on Nico Puchi a decade later. When the editors at Nico Puchi first asked readers to submit photographs of their everyday fashion choices, they were flooded with images of attire that was, in a word, bland. However, Yamamoto decided to highlight the over-the-top pop cuteness and rebellious nature of many of the images submitted because he believed kids were smart enough to extract the elements of particular fashion brands they identified with, especially styles that borrowed bits
Girls' day out: From left to right, Eriko Sawada (39) and her daughter Meina (7) with Miyu Ota (10) and her mother Akemi (36) at the Tokyo Top Kids Collection. YOSHIAKI MIURA
and pieces from haute couture. "We are amazed at how serious they are," Yamamoto said. "They alwayssurprisingly, commercially driven. Anyone wishing to submit an application to join beat our expectations with unfathomable fashion ideas." Yamamoto's editorial strategy has so far proven to be a commercial success. Bimonthly magazine subscriptions have grown by 20 percent since 2010 to around 100,000 copies. The magazine's website gets 5 million page views per month, offering a community space where readers are able to exchange information and tips on topics such as autumn wardrobes. Yamamoto attributes the growth in magazine sales to a rise in kids' overall ambitions following the success of AKB48, which now seems to place more emphasis on being in the spotlight. At Nico Puchi, a competitive "career path" for a small selection of readers does indeed exist. Ten frequent contributors can ultimately become "super dokumo" by attracting a steady stream of votes from readers. As such, these models are typically invited to sign short-term modeling contracts with the magazine that include reasonable fees for their work on a regular basis. Dokumo models, on the other hand, must cater entirely for their own needs. They have to buy their own outfits, ask their mothers to sit in as their makeup and hair stylists at photo shoots and pay all travel expenses. It's certainly an expensive hobby for kids to take up on a long-term basis, requiring regular trips to expensive clothes shops and cosmetics stores. However, most parents try to be supportive of the fad because they don't want to deny their children any opportunity that could lead to a lucrative career in future. "In a way, this is a great opportunity for Suguri to learn how society works," her mother said. "However, she has to show more seriousness by practicing how to walk, how to pose and also remembering to keep up with her blogging." Reiko admitted to being something of an aspiring actress when she was her daughter's age. However, after an argument with her parents, she said she gave up on her goal. She said that she doesn't want that to happen to Suguri. She also worries about her daughter's modesty, mentioning that Suguri is too shy to discuss her modeling career with many of her closest friends. However, her daughter has her own way of ensuring she sticks to her modeling career. "I would love to join the tennis club at school but I can't," Suguri said. "Playing sports will make my legs fatter or look more masculine, which I don't want." A number of aspiring models are going one step further than Suguri. In April, 11-year-old Yua Ishikawa decided to add walking lessons to after-school activities that already included cram school, English lessons and hip-hop dance classes. Born in Shizuoka, Yua is an established model for a fashion brand called Inner Press. Like Suguri, she also participated in the Tokyo Top Kids Collection, but felt she needed to take additional walking lessons to pass the myriad auditions she hopes to apply for — both now and in future. Every week, she goes to Nglobal, a Shizuoka-based enterprise that offers specialized modeling courses and includes classes for children. "My favorite after-school activity is the walking 
Screen tweens: Models wave to the cameras at Tokyo Top Kids Collection on Aug. 1, 2012. YOSHIAKI MIURA
class," said Ishikawa, whose 90-minute curriculum consists of a hip-hop dance as a warmup exercise, association training that helps her respond to an art director's desired collection theme and actual walking lessons. Cocoro Fujii, an instructor at Nglobal and a finalist for the 2006 Miss International beauty pageant, said there is an increasing demand for such classes in Tokyo. "It's not easy to teach kids how to walk as they tend to forget easily," Fujii said. "We also have to teach them how to walk in a way that they can maximize the attractiveness of their clothes." As for Suguri, she is honing her style and skills by studying fashion magazines so that she can one day become the ideal Nico Puchi model. Nevertheless, she also has a plan B prepared — just in case the catwalk comes to an end. "If I can't be a model, I would like to become a patissiere," she said. "Either one sounds fun."Source: The Japan Times Online,
A-List Celebrity Kids Style
Now that your favorite celeb fashionistas are all grown up and starting families, we have more celebrity style to look forward to in their offspring. Celebs like Gwen Stefani, Jada Pinkett Smith, Kourtney Kardashian and Madonna are all A-List celebs that are well known for their daring and dashing style, but one would wonder, will this stylish flare carry on to their children. Below BornTooBlog has featured a fashion pictorial on just that; the A-List Style of some of your favorite celebrity kids...CHECK IT OUT:Kingston Stefani Rossdale, Mother: Gwen Stefani The offspring of Pop-Rock royalty Gwen Stefani and Gavin Rossdale spawned stylish Kingston Stefani Rossdale. 1 of 2 of Gwen's young boys. Kingston is known for his colorful fashion palette and carefree style that mixes fashion genres and aesthetics. Kingston seems to love utility pockets where he can store his toys and check the new bleach blonde do! Look familiar? Lourdes Ciccone, Mother: Madonna , Lourdes Ciccone is Madonna's only biological daughter, whom she had with fitness trainer Carlos Leon in 1994. Although the courtship was short lived, it produced Lourdes, the spitting image of Madonna, blessed with an eye for fashion just like her mother. I predict that she will soon be the talk of the town a la Nicole Ritchie and Paris Hilton. Just give her a few years.Mason Kardashian, Mother: Kourtney Kardashian Mason Kardashian is the newest edition to the Kardashian Clan and his parents Kourtney Kardashian and Scott Disick are quite the stylish couple. They love to dress Mase in mature stripes, with black, white and grey hues in his play time. When its time to dress up, Mason is all about the glamour and prestige as he dons suits and sports coats much like his father Scott wears on a daily basis. This kid definitely has inherited the style gene on both sides. Suri Cruise Mother: Kati Holmes Suri is the resident DIVA of all celebrity offspring. And with a father like Tom Cruise, one of the most wealthy actors in Hollywood, why wouldnt she be? It has been said that Suri loves to dress herself, loves high heels, makeup and girly clothing and loves to tote a big girl purse/bag wherever she goes. Suri loves colorful print dresses, fancy heels with embellishments and flashy accessories that make her look like a little Hollywood princess. Willow Smith, Mother: Jada Pinkett Smith Willow busted onto the scene at a very young age with a rock star attitude and a Pop hit to boot (with her hit single "Whip My Hair"). Fashion is at the forefront of her image and she has been spotted sitting front row with her mother at fashions shows in Paris and London. Already known as the daughter of Hollywood royalty, Jada Pinkett and Will Smith, Willow has crawled from beneath the shadows of her talented actor brother Jaden, and has carved her own niche in fashion and music. Her style would be described as punker/rock/pop diva meets couture fashionista, always keeping it lively and fun with her plethora of hues, patters and textures. On A Side Note: The sad thing is that these kids throw away more clothes than I purchase in a year. Still looking to see if the Smith's or Kardashian's would like to adopt a 31 year old African American Fashionista to add to their brood...LOL! WEIGH IN Which A-List celebrity kid fashion do you like most? Who do you think is too over the top? Would you dress your children like this and why? If not, why not? Source: Born Too Blog
Photos Of The College Girls Competing On 'America's Next Top Model'
I pretend I'm Marilyn Monroe: Blake Lively

Gossip Girl' star Blake Lively says she pretends to be screen icon Marilyn Monroe when she walks the red carpet to help radiate an "incredible aura of self-confidence". Lively, 24, said she gets negative thoughts before stepping out at a big event and uses the confident attitudes of Monroe to tackle her anxieties, reported The Telegraph. "I have insecurities like any girl. I used to be really shy and not confident. I hated being tall. Walking the red carpet is so scary, so I pretend to be Marilyn Monroe - someone who owned their sexuality and projected this incredible aura of self-confidence," she said. The actress said she feels she has to show off her fashion credentials in real life too. "There's a lot of pressure to constantly find the best designer outfits. As a teenager, my mum was constantly after me to dress better. She encouraged me to dress up and discover my own style," Lively added. Source: Screen India, Image: flickr.com
Charlize Theron Rocks A Strapless Blue Sequin Dress At 'Prometheus' Premiere
Starpulse: On the eve of the release of her film "Snow White And The Huntsman," Charlize Theron attended the "Prometheus" premiere in London today wearing a pretty blue sequined dress. The actress showed off her long lean legs in black strappy sandals. She has tattoos of a koi carp and flower on her ankle and foot. Her new film "Snow White" has been receiving mixed reviews from critics. She plays the Queen, who seeks to achieve immortality by consuming the heart of the land's most beautiful girl (Kristen Stewart). In "Prometheus," space explorers travel to the edge of the universe after making a profound discovery that hints at the true origins of the human race. The film opens in theaters June 8. See more photos of Charlize. © 2012 Starpulse.com, Photo Credits: WENN.com, Source: Starpulse
Chechen traditions come into fashion
By Natalya Kovalenko, The Firdaws fashion house, founded by Medni Kadyrova, the wife of Chechen President Ramzan Kadyrov, has presented a new collection of designer clothes, Lady Chechnya, in Dubai. The audience enjoyed a collection of over 70 pieces of day wear and evening outfits, including wedding dresses made of velvet, chiffon, silk and lace and decorated with Eastern-style embroidery and semi-precious
Michelle Obama, Lady Gaga among Time's 100 fashion icons
Indian Express, Agencies : London, Time magazine has listed the world’s 100 most influential style superstars in anticipation of its annual poll.While child actors-turned-designers Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen, the First Lady and the ‘monster mother’ Lady Gaga made it to the list, many big-names and fashion pioneers failed to feature, the Daily Mail reported. Divided into categories, the list is fairly exhaustive and includes designers and brands, models, muses, photographers and editors and stylists, whose careers stretch back to 1923 when Time launched. Still, as with any list-making endeavour, there were bound to be oversights. The 25-year-old Olsen duo join iconic creators such as Miuccia Prada, Coco Chanel and Christian Dior on the Designers and Brands list, which seems a strange choice when many prominent and highly influential succeeding designers, save for John Galliano, and Karl Lagerfeld, were clearly missing. Raf Simons, Christopher Bailey and Hedi Slimane, who is credited for bringing skinny jeans to the mainstream, were all left off the list, which doesn’t include any notable retailers either, such as Andrew Saks and Ikram Goldman. However a few head-turners made the cut, such as Sarah Blakely, the inventor of Spanx, who Time said “has helped shape the modern woman – literally”. Jacques Heim and Louis Reard, the men who invented the two piece swimsuit, which eventually became the bikini, also featured. On the list of Editors and Stylists, others may wonder where the more mainstream visionaries are who have made an impact, like Rachel Zoe. While more predictable mentions were included, such as Anna Wintour and Grace Coddington, renowned fashion critics Cathy Horyn and Suzy Menkes were both left out. This is mostly noteworthy for the fact that Robin Gavensen, however, was mentioned. She is the Pulitzer prize winning Daily Beast writer who Karl Lagerfeld publicly claimed to have never heard of, after she wrote a less than shining review of his current designer status. Michelle Obama joins former First Lady Jackie Onassis in the muses category, who sit alongside the likes of Lady Gaga, Brigitte Bardot and Andy Warhol - however Warhol’s own iconic muse, Edie Sedgwick, is noticeably missing. In the models category, Nineties supers including Naomi Campbell and Kate Moss make an appearance, but Claudia Schiffer, ‘The Body’ Elle Macpherson and Christy Turlington were left off. Gisele Bundchen, who topped the Forbes magazine World’s 10 Top-Earning Models in May last year, is listed, but as far as newer faces go it ends with her. Younger iconic faces like Lara Stone and Coco Rocha were left off, who have made waves in both editorial aspects of the modelling industry as well as their role in helping to re-shape it, bringing attention to its body issues and labour issues, respectively. While Heidi Klum was counted, Tyra Banks, who as well as building a a successful empire, was the first African-American woman to feature on covers of both the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue and Victoria’s Secret catalogue, was surprisingly missing. Time magazine’s top 100 fashion icons included: Giorgio Armani, Pierre Cardin, Coco Chanel, Christian Dior, Dolce and Gabbana, Tom Ford, Calvin Klein, Karl Lagerfeld, Christian Louboutin, Alexander McQueen, Levi Strauss, Gisele Bundchen, Naomi Campbell, Cindy Crawford, Heidi Klum, Kate Moss, The Beatles, Michael Jackson, Lady Gaga, Madonna, Michelle Obama, Princess Diana, Source: Indian Express
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