Editorial
Models Sascha Alexander and Lulu Tenney for Vogue Magazine September 2024 Issue wearing looks by Louis Vuitton, shot by Steven Meisel

seen from Uzbekistan
seen from Maldives

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Italy
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from Malaysia

seen from United Kingdom

seen from China

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Poland

seen from Romania
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from Greece
seen from Germany
Editorial
Models Sascha Alexander and Lulu Tenney for Vogue Magazine September 2024 Issue wearing looks by Louis Vuitton, shot by Steven Meisel
25.08.2022 @voguemagazine See Thebe Magugu and Valentino’s Pierpaolo Piccioli Gloriously Transform Each Other’s Work https://www.vogue.com/article/thebe-magugu-pierpaolo-piccioli-designer-swap @thebemagugu @pppiccioli @maisonvalentino #thebemagugu #maisonvalentino #vogue #voguemagazine #septemberissue #africa #southafrica #johannesburg #italy #rome #fashion #readytowear #couture #hautecouture https://www.instagram.com/p/ChuBDSoD69O/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
W Korea September 2020
Taylor is an “American girl, she is a sister, a daughter, and a hard worker. Those are the kinds of people that I am drawn towards,” says Sherald. She calls this portrait a contribution to the “moment and to activism—producing this image keeps Breonna alive forever.”
Sherald’s process typically begins with taking a picture of her subject. Painting Taylor, a person she had never met, who would never be able to sit for her, presented a unique challenge. Sherald took extraordinary care in reimagining Taylor, inflecting her portrait with symbols of the 26-year-old’s life. Sherald found a young woman with similar physical attributes, studied Taylor’s hairstyles and fashion choices, and drew inspiration from things she learned about the young woman—that she had been a frontline worker in the battle against COVID-19; that her boyfriend had been about to propose marriage; that she was self-possessed, brave, loving, loved.
“She sees you seeing her. The hand on the hip is not passive, her gaze is not passive. She looks strong!” says Sherald. “I wanted this image to stand as a piece of inspiration to keep fighting for justice for her. When I look at the dress, it kind of reminds me of Lady Justice.”
Jasmine Elder of Jibri, an Atlanta-based fashion designer, created a crepe dress specifically for the cover. “When thinking about what she was going to wear, I wanted Breonna to like it,” says Sherald. “I wanted her family to look and say, I can see my daughter and sister in this.” A friend sent Sherald an image of actress Danielle Brooks wearing an Elder piece, and Sherald found Elder on @shoppeblack-blog , a digital platform curated by husband and wife Tony O. Lawson and Shantrelle P. Lewis that showcases Black businesses. During the painting process, Sherald added movement to the dress, and a slit—“I thought, What would I want if I were 26.
I ❤️ NY
To celebrate the creativity and resiliency of NYC, a special September 2020 subscriber cover recreating to Ormond Gigli’s iconic 1960 photograph, ‘Girls in the Windows’. InStyle magazine
Photographer: Jason Schmidt
Styled by: Lotta Elisa Agullo-Collins
🌹🧚🏾♀️SEPTEMBER VOGUE🧚🏾♀️🌹 . Adut Akech cover Vogue Australia’s digital September issue in Maticevski. . Akech looks magical in an array of whimsical gowns from Vetements, Alexander McQueen, Valentino, Mui Mui, and Maticevski. The South Sudanese-Australian model is currently one of the busiest women in fashion having walked for dozens of big-name designers including Valentino, Alexander McQueen, Givenchy, Prada, Burberry and Versace. She recently made headlines for appearing in British Vogue’s Forces of Change issue, co-edited by Duchess of Sussex, Meghan Markle, and for calling out WHO Magazine after they published a story about her using another black model’s image. “By this happening I feel like it defeated the purpose of what I stand for and spoke about [in the story],” she said via Instagram. “It goes to show that people are very ignorant and narrowminded that they think every black girl or African people looks the same.”
@dveightmag Cover Interview Story 2019 🖤 @staerkandchristensen #dveight #staerkandchristensen #septemberissue https://www.instagram.com/p/B3DRQ2_Br-2/?igshid=k24d4y9eepye
🦋
I see no difference @taylorswift @taylornation