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Saturday, December 26, 2020

8 Things To Know Before Buying a Watch

Are you thinking about buying a watch? As a beautiful object and as a metaphor, the wristwatch may be the ultimate heirloom. It witnesses both the mundane moments and the milestones in our daily lives, and its design is an intimate expression of taste. Collecting watches is like embarking on a lifelong adventure; both vintage and new models, either of which can be rare, appreciate with changing trends – as do historically important timepieces or those with a celebrity pedigree. For example, the iconic 1962 Cartier Tank watch that belonged to Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis was sold for over $500,000 to Kim Kardashian West at a Christie’s auction in 2017.

Here are eight things watch collectors Dan Tanenbaum, Jeremy Ong, Pedro Mendes and Kat Shoulders and Katlen Schmid say you need to know before buying a watch.

1. Do your research

To talk shop about watch specs, learn the lingo pertaining to shape, finishing and balance as well as engineering: Think case size, thickness and crown, and know a tourbillon from a minute repeater. And bone up on a piece’s background. “Know the history behind it, get it checked out and don’t hesitate to pay a premium with a dealer,” says Dan Tanenbaum. “It’ll give you peace of mind and give the watch credibility.”

2. Know your size

Familiarize yourself with dimensions that work best for you. Kat shoulders, of the horology podcast Tenn & Two, advises that most vintage men’s watches from the ’30s and ’40s are particularly suited to women’s wrist proportions. Know thicknesses and dimensions, because brands like Rolex list case sizes (for example, 34 mm, 36 mm and 41 mm) as opposed to “women’s” or “men’s” on the label.

3. Get a few tools, and store watches properly for protection

A loupe and watchmaking repair tools like fine screwdrivers, a spring bar tool (for changing the strap without scratching the case) and a case opener are essential; try precision-made Swiss brand Bergeon’s wares. Make sure to budget for the fact that in order to maintain their mechanical movements, higher-end and vintage watches should be professionally serviced about every five years. Toronto podcast producer and writer Pedro Mendes stores his watches in display boxes so he can appreciate them while keeping them clean, free of dust and away from the sun’s damaging rays.

4. Buying a watch is best done in person

Unless you’re dealing with a reputable auction house or an horology dealer, vet significant vintage purchases (anything in the five figures) in person – especially with harder-to-find grails. Collector Jeremy Ong once flew to Manila to inspect a private seller’s Universal Genève Tri-Compax 222102 from the ’60s (a rare variant model nicknamed “the Evil Clapton”) before buying it.

5. Combine your interests

“If they include water or outdoor activities, there’s a whole genre of dive and field watches,” says Mendes. “And if they’re art deco or jazz, there are whole streams of watches that come out of that design aesthetic. For me, it’s satisfying to make those connections.”

6. Join a community to satisfy your curiosity

“I’ve met collectors from all walks of life, all bonded together by a common hobby,” Ong says of joining Instagram to share collection photos. “It gets your name out there, and I’ve made a bunch of new watch friends and also attained some pretty amazing pieces.” While gatherings like RedBar Group have gone virtual for now, Mendes suggests seeking them out once COVID restrictions let up. In pre-pandemic times, podcast Tenn & Two’s Katlen Schmidt loved these personal connections. “More than the watches, the neat thing about this and any hobby is the people,” she says. “You make so many friendships.”

7. Know when to let go

Trial and error is part of collecting. As you grow more confident, you can swap and sell watches you’re less interested in to fund other pieces and trade up. “I think it’s always changing,” says Schmidt. “You can never say it’s your watch collection until the end of time.” Adds Shoulders: “I went through a major flipping phase – watches coming in and going out. I don’t regret it. I think I learned a lot about myself.”

8. Be patient

“You should never be in a rush, like ‘I have to get this tomorrow’ or ‘It’s my husband’s 50th birthday in a week,’” advises Tanenbaum, especially with hard- to-find models. “If you’re not in a hurry for it, you’ll get a great example – that’s true with the collecting of anything.”

A version of this article originally appeared in the Winter issue of FASHION magazine. 

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Friday, December 25, 2020

Texture Talk: Meet the Curl Boss Behind Canadian Haircare Line LUS Brands

Frizz: The unwelcome F-word in beauty that has been tossed around for decades when it comes to hair. Something that’s seen as needing to be tamed, dealt with and, whether overt or veiled, a word that has long been directed at curly hair. Just Google synonyms for frizz and, bam: every curl type (wave, curl, coil and kink) shows up.

The beauty industry’s stance on fighting frizzy curls has softened as of late thanks to more and more curly-haired folks learning to except and embrace their natural textures, but when Toronto-based Sahar Saidi got the idea to start her own curl line, LUS Brands, back in 2015, the mainstream messaging around caring for textured hair still came with a heavy negative tone — and product-packed haircare regimens as a direct result.

“Big and small brands were positioning curly hair as this massive problem to be solved, and then they were saying, ‘Here’s all this product to deal with your problem.’ I was really tired of being told we needed multiple products to tame our frizz, control our manes and maintain our hair,” chronicles Saidi. And for the 39-year-old, an exhausting and onerous hair routine, along with an incessant desire to buy countless different products that looked like they’d solve her curly hair needs, have been a part of her hair journey since she was a teen. “I bought my first set of hair products at 15 with money from my first part-time job. That’s twenty years of me buying hair products before starting my company at 35,” she shares. “I have a lot of hair and, as I got older, I wanted to simplify my routine.”

 

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Motivated to make things easier for all curls and fed up with the idea that she needed to wrestle with nature, the entrepreneur left her decade-long career in sales and marketing and set out to create a direct-to-consumer haircare brand of pared-back basics made from simple, effective ingredients that wouldn’t wreak havoc on curls and that were dermatologist tested.

After spending over a year in product development and going through multiple iterations, Saidi landed on a three-step system that launched in 2017. There’s her non-stripping, sulfate-free shampoo; colour-safe and silicone-free detangling conditioner and a curl-enhancing, all-in-one styling product available in customized formulas for wavy, curly and kinky-coily patterns. “The all-in-one styler came out of my own frustrations of needing a leave-in conditioner, a styling gel and then a serum of some sort to break the crunch and cast from the gel,” she shares. “I just thought, ‘Why am I pilling three to four different products in my hair?’”

 

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Since it’s debut, LUS Brands has gone on to launch an express deep conditioner that repairs in 15 minutes and under, a multitasking hair, skin and nail elixir oil made from a blend of seven oils and vitamin E; as well as an aloe vera and provitamin B5-enriched hair perfume featuring the brand’s obsessed-about scent. “Hair perfume is hot in the straight-hair category, and I was just like, ‘Why isn’t there one that’s free from phthalates and alcohol and infused with ingredients that are actually good for curls?’” says Saidi, who made Canada’s Top 40 Under 40 list this year. What’s more: The brand is releasing a fragrance-free version of its signature three-step system this Boxing Day for those who prefer that unscented life.

LUS Brands Fragrance-Free Original Three-Step System
LUS Brands Fragrance-Free Original Three-Step System. Shampoo, $21; Conditioner, $21; and All-in-One Styler, $24.

As for the meaning behind LUS? It’s an acronym that stands for “love ur self” — a collective reminder to stop fighting and start embracing. “The number one thing that unites all curls — whether you’re type 2, 3 or 4 — is that, for the majority of us, we’ve all spent time rejecting and trying to change something that naturally grows out of our head. We’re united in that struggle,” expresses Saidi. “LUS is about empowering people, starting with their hair.”

 

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Thursday, December 24, 2020

Sarah Nicole Landry in Hayley Elsaesser + More Canadian Fashion Moments This Week

Time for a closet update? Whether it’s bold graphic loungewear or accessories you’re after, we’ve rounded up our favourite Canadian fashion moments from the week to give you some inspo for the holiday season and beyond.

Sarah Nicole Landry in Hayley Elsaesser

 

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The Birds Papaya founder Sarah Nicole Landry gave us both a pregnancy update and a jolt of social feed fun by posting a pic of her bump while wearing bright pink, cherry printed-loungewear by Hayley Elsaesser. She finished off the joyful look with pink-hued makeup, of course.

Tara Spencer-Nairn in By Annalay

 

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While hyping up her Capricorn qualities by giving us a glimpse of her Zodiac-inspired pendant necklace, Spencer-Nairn gave a shout out to local Black-owned businesses with a post about her recent purchase of pieces from Toronto-based label, By Annalay. Spencer-Nairn also showed off a Wonder Woman cuff by the brand, wearing both the bracelet and necklace with a tailored striped shirt, which illustrated the versatility of her new accessories.

Sasha Mei in Mejuri

 

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Toronto-based influencer Sasha Mei gave us a lesson in minimalist ways to wear statement jewellery, mixing pearl-and-malachite earrings by Mejuri with an array of gold rings and wearing them with a simple white top. A perfect solution for when you want to look polished for a virtual meeting but not overly done.

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Photographer Michael Kai Young Reimagines Holiday Dressing

“The boundaries of what we consider ‘masculine’ and ‘feminine’ fashion are these arbitrary ideas that were made up at one point in time,” says Toronto-based photographer Michael Kai Young of the motivation behind New Rules, an editorial photoshoot dreamed up in collaboration with stylist Lucia Perna. “We wanted to show fashion can go beyond that.”

In the photoshoot, more traditionally feminine pieces, like gowns and tulle, are worn by men. “We wanted to present it in a way that showed [wearing these pieces] shouldn’t have to feel like a costume or dress-up, although there’s nothing wrong with that, either,” says Kai Young of the natural, lived-in aesthetic of the shoot.

See the editorial below and get inspired for your holiday and New Year’s Eve outfits in…well, 2021?

 

Man in slip dress
Dress, Helmut Lang at Nordstrom. Coat, Gorm. Ear cuff, Rita Tesolin. Ring, vintage.
Man holding coat
Dress, Narces. Shoes, Saint Laurent. Ring, Vintage. Socks, stylist’s own.
Man with blue eyeshadow
Ear cuffs, Y/Project Ear Cuff at Archives Boutique.
Man in gown
Dress, Narces. Earrings, Area at Archives Boutique. Fascinator, Lilliput Hats. Rings, Vintage.
Man in custom head piece
Head piece, Lilliput Hats, Earring, Rita Tesolin. Rings Rita Tesolin and vintage. Boots, vintage Bottega Veneta.
Man in hat
Hat, Gorm. Crystal Head Piece and Choker, both Area at Archives Boutique.
Man in suit with bow
Jacket, Hugo Boss. Bow top, Narces. Pants, vintage Vivienne Westwood. Gloves, Berman & Co. Necklace, Vitaly.
Man walking down stairs
Jacket, top and pants, Marcelo Burlon Country Of Milan at Nordstrom. Track jacket, Lacoste. Dress, Gorm. Sneakers, Age Official. Earring (right), Ambush at Archives Boutique. Earring (left), Justine Clenquet at Archives Boutique. Rings and Pearl Necklace, vintage.
Man in blue gown
Dress, Grom. Ear Cuffs, Y/Project at Archives Boutique
Man walking
Vest and dress, Yung Alexander by Alexander Kershaw. Top, Vans. Pants, Marcelo Burlon at Nordstrom. Backpack, 1017 ALYX, earrings Ambush and Justine Clenquet at Archives Boutique.

 

Portrait of a man
Vest, Yung Alexander by Alexander. Earring, Justine Clenquet at Archives Boutique. Rings, vintage.
Man on escalator
Tulle Coat, Hugo Boss. Dress, Gorm. Vest, 1017 ALYX at Archives Boutique. Tights, Nike. Earring, Justine Clenquet at Archives. Hat, Kangol.
Dress Gorm. Rings, Vintage

Photography, Michael Kai Young; Fashion Direction, Lucia Perna; Grooming, Alexandre Deslauriers using Dior & R+Co; Models Brandon Tyler Wilson, TJ Delafraner at Ciotti, Mckinley Lorenzen, Nyong James at Plutino; Hector Andreas, Tenzin Norbu, Cédrick Dauberton at Elite; Dante Townsend at Next; Mathieu Simoneau, Evan Thomas at Want; Matthew Jackson at Spot6 Management. 

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How to Gift Fragrance According to Perfume Titan Jo Malone CBE

Gifting a fragrance, in my opinion, is tricky territory. Is it presumptuous to offer someone a scent you like and hope they’d wear it? Are you insinuating they smell bad? Perhaps I’m overthinking this, but unless it’s re-purchasing a scent someone already wears, I usually avoid it all together. This is a mistake, Jo Malone, CBE, tells me.

Malone, founder of the fragrance line Jo Loves, is synonymous with perfume (note: she is no longer associated with the brand that bears her name, “Jo Malone”). Her three-years and running partnership with Zara is available for the first time in Canada, and the collection of affordable candles and fragrances is perfectly giftable, she says. Read on for her thoughts on gifting fragrance and the best-smell items from the Zara x Jo Loves collection.

Do you think gifting fragrance is a good idea? Are there any rules around that?

Of course I think fragrances are a good gift, whether it’s a personal fragrance or a scented candle or a room spray. I don’t think there are necessarily rules. Maybe if you’re gifting a fragrance to someone, make sure you do a little bit of research. Find three fragrances that they love and you’ll see a synergy between them – maybe they love citrus or heavy florals, for example – and then buy from that fragrance family. If you don’t know them really well, try something less personal, a wonderful shower gel or body cream or a scented candle.

Zara Jo Loves fragrance collection
Vetiver Pamplemousse Candle ($29.90) and Fragrance ($49.90)

What items would you gift from the Zara collection to in-laws or a teacher?

If you were going to give to your mother in-law something,  I’d probably do something like Waterlily Tea Dress, a clean citrus. If it was to my father-in-law, I’d probably do something like Vetiver Pamplemousse, not too cloying, not too cluttering. For a teacher, something along the lines of the Tuberose Noir, which is this beautiful single note, or something like Bohemian Bluebells, which has got a very artistic twist to it.

Do you have a preference for where candles are placed in the home?

I burn them all the time, on every floor, in every room. We did these amazing ones for Zara this year, which are double layered. It starts off with vetiver, very sort of citrusy and clean, and then suddenly you start to feel the ebony wood pushing through. It has a sort of log fire feel to it. That’s an amazing gift. I actually was burning one this morning.

Amalfi Sunray products
Zara x Jo Loves Amalfi Sunray collection, from $11.90, at zara.com.

What fragrance notes do you think will be big for 2021?

A huge part of 2021 is going to be about people reclaiming life, and I think fragrances are going to go partner those memories. There will be a huge proportion of fragrances that you’ve burnt or used at home that will be a powerful memory of survival as well. We’re going to see fragrance in a very, very different form and a different language for next year.

There are certain smells that I’ve worked on – and there’s two in particular, which I can’t tell you the names of because they’re still to be launched – but I will always remember the day and moment where I created them. Our four walls have become our office, our school, our gym, our restaurant, our cinema – they’ve become everything. The sense of smell has so many powerful links to our memories now.

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Fashion Predictions For 2021 (and Beyond) From Canadian Educator And Activist Ben Barry

As the chair of fashion at Ryerson University, advocate and educator Ben Barry has tirelessly championed a more conscious and inclusive approach within the modern fashion world. So, it’s not surprising that Barry announced last week that starting next fall, he would become the dean of fashion at The New School within New York’s Parsons School of Design.

While he will certainly be missed by Canadian creatives and others who have watched him help to transform our local fashion education system – including the hiring of thought-leaders like Fashion and Race Database founder Kimberly Jenkins, who joined Ryerson’s faculty earlier this year – Barry assures us that this new post will simply be an expansion and augmentation of the work he’s done in the style space so far.

“First and foremost, I’m excited to scale and amplify the work for radical inclusion in fashion,” Barry says. “That’s work that’s begun in Canada [and] that Canadian academics, creatives and designers are leading internationally. Now I’m able to bring all this experience and perspective to a platform like Parsons, which can only amplify that globally…. I think as Canadians, we’re so humble we don’t often realize that the world looks to Canada as doing exciting, progressive work in so many fields, including fashion. But they do.”

We naturally wanted to know Barry’s fashion predictions heading into 2021, and from how we shop to what we’ll be buying, he had plenty of interesting ideas.

I’m sure you’ve seen a lot of change this year, as we all have. Let’s talk about what you’re thinking about moving into 2021.

We’ve seen the growth of Zoom-wear, and I think we’re going to see a movement to high-glam Zoom-wear. At this point in the pandemic, people want to experiment with new ways of pulling looks together to unleash our creativity and to uplift our spirits. I’m imagining that there’s going to be an increase in terms of design concepts and aesthetics – thinking of really big shoulders, bold colours, embellishments and sparkles around the neck and shoulders. Details that give people the pure joy in dressing up. I think we’ll still be wearing pajamas and lounge pants on the bottom – I don’t think that will change, I think we love that. But the top is going to be less about hoodies and more about high glamour.

I think you’re totally right, because this virtual world isn’t just a stop-gap – it’s how we live now. People will still be working a lot from home moving forward, even as things will start to open back up.

Totally. I think post-pandemic, whatever that means, it’s clear there will be a new hybrid format for work, and for life in general. So, in many ways, how we think about clothes and how they are designed will be about navigating those spaces. I do think people will want to enjoy the energy in wearing clothes again moving into the new year.

Agreed! I leaned fully into leisurewear for much of the year, but now I want to start making more of an effort.

I think there’s also a consciousness of how clothing and proportions appear on [virtual platforms] and there’s a mindfulness from a consumer perspective and a designer perspective in terms of how something looks on Zoom. What takes up the frame and achieves the silhouette I want? That’s a different way of designing and thinking about clothing than when it’s a full look.

Definitely. What else is going to shift in the coming months?

There’s going to be what I’m going to call a ‘centering’ of knowledge and experiences from disability communities. And what I mean is that with continued social distancing measures, the fashion industry is moving towards this remote work environment. There are many questions in the industry right now: How do you design? How do you develop new products? How do you buy products remotely? Even, how can one ‘hack’ clothing or modify it to fit their body? One of the things that’s come out of the pandemic is that there’s been this honouring of the fact that disabled people and disability communities have long been experts on how to hack a world that hasn’t been designed for them; and, how they develop community and work remotely, which is a reality for many people in disability communities.

At the beginning of the pandemic there was this sense that we need to reinvent the wheel, without the recognition that this knowledge already exists for many people. As we continue to move forward in this world and think about all these things, there’s going to be increased efforts in collaboration with and credit to crip and disability communities who have been working in these ways their whole lives.

 

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These are very encouraging predictions….

You have to have a balance between fun ones and serious ones! Let’s go to another fun one: An increased importance of the sensuality of fabric and fit. We are sitting in our bodies and feeling our bodies like never before, because we’re not moving about the world in the same way. Pre-pandemic, the focus was on how clothes look: How do they look for Instagram? How do they look in the world? Fit and fabric was important, but it wasn’t the centre of attention. The idea of clothing as a second skin has taken on increased importance now. So, there’s almost a deeper focus on how we feel in our clothes, and how they feel on us – not just on how they look on us.

It’s interesting that you brought that up, because I recently bought a pair of pants that had an elasticized waist that I thought would work well for wearing right now in terms of coziness, but the fabric was a wool that was very heavy and scratchy. I could’ve worn them to fashion week, but for being at home, I couldn’t conceive of wearing them and being comfortable. Fabrication is so important! Speaking of which, much of what we’ve seen in terms of fashion, even before the pandemic, was about what’s on a screen….

Totally. I think about before, when I would check my outfit in a full-length mirror before going out, and it was much less about, ‘How does this fabric feel on my body?’ It was that I loved the proportions, that the way it was going to move would be amazing…. That’s what brought me so much joy; it was about the aesthetic versus the tactile nature of a piece.

Yes, I feel like this is something we don’t talk enough about; I’m missing seeing fabrics up close at a showroom or a fashion show – seeing the texture, feeling the weight, seeing how it plays against the light. That’s such a good prediction to watch unfold. What else will we be talking about going forward?

This isn’t a shock for me to say, but there’s going to be a continued demand towards radical inclusion in fashion. We’ve seen deep systemic inequities come to light in the past year, particularly around anti-Black racism in fashion and around racial injustice. As we move into the new year, both the industry and customers are going to be holding the fashion world accountable for their statements on Black Lives Matter and their commitments to do better. There’s going to be increased accountability in that – like, you made these statements over the summer and we now want to see how you’ve acted on them. And the brands that will succeed will be the ones that can show that their words were not merely performative, but that they have been working to make deep changes and are transparent about what those changes have been.

The other part of this that I’m seeing is a continued growth in parallel fashion industries that exist in addition to the big-F, mainstream fashion system. These are smaller communities, fashion weeks and organizations that bring people together who have been excluded and marginalized from capital-F fashion, and who don’t feel a part of that. These parallel fashion systems will flourish; there’s both support in the mainstream industry to cover them, to support them, and to look towards them and there’s also consumer demand to see all of this work that exists, and has existed, outside of this singular, monolithic system. We’ve seen it with Indigenous Fashion Week Toronto, which was a massive event this year. It’s doing fashion on its own terms, and it was covered by so many mainstream media outlets and there was huge consumer support – the marketplace sold out in an hour. It was so popular.

Speaking of fashion weeks, I wanted to ask you specifically what you think will happen to the shows next year, especially given all the digital strategies we’ve seen revealed?

That’s the question, right? My prediction is that moving forward, fashion weeks will become hybrid. I think there will always be the desire for an in-person fashion show. Maybe not as the dominant or only model, but there’s something about the materiality and the performance that will always require some kind of in-person event. But the fashion community knows what digital can do – particularly what happens when a digital [presentation] becomes a performance, when you incorporate music and lighting and choreography.

Ideally, a fashion show doesn’t only show clothes, it’s a narrative about the collection. It leaves viewers with a feeling. The best digital platforms will be able to show the details and movement and structure of clothes while also telling a story and leaving viewers with emotion. It’s being figured out, and it will only happen with significant collaboration between fashion and other creative industries. But digital will always leave the materiality out, and we can’t ignore that that’s so much a part of what fashion is.

It’s true. I’ve thought a lot about what digitization will lend to the democratization of fashion in terms of accessibility, which is so important – but I’d be lying if I said I didn’t want to see another Simone Rocha runway show IRL, too. And I rely so much on fashion events, including student shows, as an opportunity to discover both local and global emerging talent. Yes, there’s the drama and beauty of big-scale shows, but there’s also the programming happening adjacently or in addition to them that puts people on my radar. For example, Mass Exodus is really how I found out about Mic. Carter. Fashion shows are a space where you can be exposed to a lot of creative ideas, and creators, at once.

Definitely. Whatever form a fashion event takes place as, there is that importance of inviting press, buyers and others in the industry into a space where they can meet emerging designers. We have to de-centre the requirement of having a huge budget to show at one of the four major fashion weeks, and also the perceived requirement of having to live in one of those cities. And we have to de-centre the North American-European nexus of fashion so that designers from all over the world can create something, like a video, that could attract the attention of people everywhere.

You’ve given me so much to think about during this chat. Any final predictions before we say goodbye?

Yes – that there will continue to be an increased desire and understanding to support local and community design. We’ve seen so many small businesses close and struggle across industries, but I think it’s raised consciousness about the concepts of: Who made my clothes and accessories? How were they made? Where were they made? Where are the materials from? What are the stories behind them? We’ve seen our neighbours struggle with their businesses, and people want to help however they can.

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Wednesday, December 23, 2020

British Model Stella Tennant Has Died

British model Stella Tennant, 50, has died. A statement from her family, as per the BBC, reads: “It is with great sadness we announce the sudden death of Stella Tennant on 22nd December 2020. Stella was a wonderful woman and an inspiration to us all. She will be greatly missed.”

The cause of death has not been announced, but police say there are “no suspicious circumstances.”

Tennant was a favourite of fashion designers, including the late Karl Lagerfeld, who likened Tennant to Coco Chanel, and made her a face of the French luxury brand in the ’90s. She also appeared in campaigns for Hermes, Burberry and Calvin Klein, among others. As of 2019, she was still walking the runway for brands like Alexander McQueen, Saint Laurent and Valentino haute couture.

Stella Tennant runway
Stella Tennant walks the runway during the Alexander McQueen runway during Paris Fashion Week Womenswear Fall/Winter 2019/2020 in March 2019. (Photo: Imaxtree)

During the closing ceremony of the 2012 London Olympics, Tennant walked alongside other British supermodels Lily Cole, Karen Elson, Kate Moss, Naomi Campbell, Jourdon Dunn and David Gandyand, and wore an outfit by British designer Christopher Kane.

When she appeared on the December 2018 cover of British Vogue, the magazine noted that “few models have had as sizeable an impact on British fashion [as Tennant].”

Stella Tennant in Valentino
Stella Tennant walks the runway during the Valentino Haute Couture Spring/Summer 2020 show as part of Paris Fashion Week in January 2019. (Photo: Imaxtree)

The model was a supporter of slow fashion and partnered with Oxfam for Second Hand September, an initiative to draw awareness to the environmental impact of fast fashion. “At my age I think it’s probably quite normal you’re not that interested in consuming, [and not] loving shopping as much as when you’re much younger,” she told The Guardian. “It’s going to take us a long time to change our habits, but I think that this is so obviously a step in the right direction,” she added.

Stella Tennant walks the McQueen runway
Stella Tennant walks the runway during the Saint Laurent Womenswear Spring/Summer 2020 show as part of Paris Fashion Week in 2019. (Photo: Imaxtree)

Tennant leaves behind her husband, photographer David Lasnet, and four children, Marcel, 21, Cecily, 19, Jasmine, 17, and Iris, 15.

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Plus Model Precious Lee On Breaking Ceilings and Finding Gratitude During the Pandemic

Precious Lee is no stranger to being first. In 2015, the fashion model’s curvy silhouette appeared in the September issue of American Vogue via a campaign for plus-size womenswear brand Lane Bryant announcing to readers: #PlusIsEqual. By appearing in the empowering ad, Lee became the very first Black curve model to appear in the magazine. And in 2016, she made history again as the first Black plus-size model when her white bikini-clad body graced the pages of Sports Illustrated’s annual swimsuit issue.

Since those body-positive milestones, Lee has been on a steady meteoric rise in the modelling world, strutting her stuff down big-name runways to landing highly covetable fashion and beauty campaigns, like serving as the face for Make Up For Ever’s Rouge Artist lipstick collection this year.

A more recent trailblazing highlight worth mentioning: Lee, along with fellow plus-size models Jill Kortleve and Alva Claire, modelling fierce, colourful looks down Versace’s live-streamed Spring/Summer 2021 runway show back in September. The catwalk moment not only marked Lee’s Milan debut, but the very first time Versace featured plus-size models altogether.

For Lee, her whole career has been dedicated to serving an audience that has long been neglected. “I came into this industry to uplift and inspire. So, doing projects that create more space for people to be themselves and feel good about it is the goal,” she says. “Breaking ceilings is extremely important to me because I know that I am capable. I want people to know that this world is for everybody.”

Precious Lee walking the Versace Spring/Summer 2021 runway
Precious Lee on the Versace Spring/Summer 2021 catwalk. Image courtesy of Imaxtree.

Yes, the Atlanta, Georgia-raised, New York-based model has tasted many sweet victories throughout her career quest so far, but Lee is quick to admit that her journey has come at the cost of repeated rejection along the way. “Being a model is literally having your income depend on your looks. It can turn gruesome at times for a model, period. But when you put ‘plus’, then ‘Black and plus’ in front of it, you’re basically putting yourself on the chopping block for people that don’t even expect you to be there,” she says.

How does the model dust herself off? “Being grounded in my confidence and rooted in positivity has brought me through my toughest obstacles,” she expresses. “I’m a very spiritual person and I know that we are all here to grow. It’s important that people know, whether they are a model or not, that you are the captain of your ship before you walk out of the door. Doesn’t matter if it’s a casting, a boardroom or a classroom. You decide and you show up as that person with pride.”

The beauty look that makes Lee feel powerful:

“Any look that I wear and feel free in because no matter if I’m going for a sultry smoky vibe or a bronzed natural moment, it’s up to me to decide to be empowered. But if I was to pick a specific look, I would have to say a cat eye and dewy skin. I love a cat eye, whether it’s a tiny flick or a bold line. I think it’s the perfect accessory to an empowered day.”

 

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Her biggest beauty influencers:

“My mommy! She showed me the power in makeup when I was a little girl. It’s a part of her daily routine and she uses it as a form of expression for her mood of the day. She’ll sometimes do bold eyes with a lip and blush for a quick trip to the store and I think that’s so fabulous. It’s inspiring to see how she glows through her makeup and uses it to experiment, make statements and have fun. I’ve learned from her to always do the same because it really keeps your look fresh, fun and unpredictable and I love that.

My father is a hairstylist who’s owned salons for many years. He really taught me the importance of keeping your hair healthy but with flair. He is a colour and cut specialist that really likes transforming hair and creating custom styles that fit the client. He has some of the best hair himself ever! Anytime I get a new haircut or colour I have him check it first.”

 

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Her lockdown lessons and routines:

“I can often tend so much to the needs of others that I have to remember to take the time to do more of my own healing modalities I love. I’ve enjoyed playing my singing bowls, detoxing, meditating, writing, yoga, reading, dancing, and studying the stars. I’m such an astrology nerd, so having time to learn more about the planets and how they affect us is so fun for me. All the quarantine time really elevated my skills.”

 

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Happiness boosters during the pandemic:

“I’ve realized how creative I love to be, so doing all the things that my regular busy schedule often cuts out was really nurturing: dancing, singing, painting, filming, writing. This lockdown opened my eyes to how much more I have to offer creatively. I’m so grateful for that.”

The post Plus Model Precious Lee On Breaking Ceilings and Finding Gratitude During the Pandemic appeared first on FASHION Magazine.



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