Showing posts with label priscillas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label priscillas. Show all posts

Sunday, 17 July 2011

Mezi (fashion) plate: Anja Konstantinova dances around model protocol

patrick mcgreal for mezi jewellery
Another day, another big buzz new model, it seems, is springboarded out of the Australasian market. Twenty year-old Anja Konstantinova is not, however, just another sultry, sun-kissed Aussie blonde. Russian-born, Konstantinova has spent half her life downunder, moving here in 2001 with her prima ballerina mother Irina Konstantinova and father Sergei Konstantinov, both former principal dancers with the Kirov Ballet who now teach at The Australian Ballet School. Signed to Sydney agency Priscilla's six months ago, Konstantinova did just two shows at May's Australian Fashion Week (Ellery and Friend of Mine). But she has obviously caught the industry's eye. Since then, according to Priscilla's, she has shot for Vogue and GQ Australia, Oyster (five stories), Grazia (four stories), Marie Claire, No, Pages Online, Poster magazine, a Ksubi calendar, an Oroton catalogue and the Spring/Summer 2011/2012 campaign for rising Sydney jewellery brand Mezi. Above and below is a first look at the Mezi campaign shot by Patrick McGreal.

Repped by Viva in Paris, Marilyn in New York and Models One in London, the international market is also beckoning.

Last month Konstantinova flew to Paris to be shot for Jalouse magazine. In the US she has already shot campaigns for Urban Outfitters and Wildfox Couture, photographed by, respectively, Charlie Engman and Mark 'The Cobrasnake' Hunter.

All the hallmarks of a very promising modelling career, on which Konstantinova hopes to build over the next three and a half months in New York and Europe.

There's just one catch. Apart from her exotic Russian and ballet ancestry, there is one other factor which marks Konstantinova apart from the rest of the Australian model pack - make that the model pack, period.

She is only five foot four.

In an industry that has traditionally shut its doors to those under five ten, what's her secret? 

"She’s extraordinary and her personality is amazing, I think that that makes a big difference" says Priscilla's agent, Lizzie Leighton-Clark. "And she’s so well in proportion as well. She’s got such a great personality, such a great look, I don't think it matters".

The photographic studio is of course very different to the runway, where models tend to be of uniform height.

At 5'7" Kate Moss was one famous exception to the industry standard. Another Priscilla's protegée, Bambi Northwood-Blyth, also 5'7", has recently managed considerable success on the international runway circuit, booking prestigious shows such as Chanel and Balenciaga.

With the Spring/Summer 2012 show season just two months away, what realistic chance does the even more petite Konstantinova have on the international circuit? 

Notes Leighton-Clark, "I’m not sure about the shows, but I have no doubt that she’s going to be a major success. She might get one or two amazing shows. I think that everyone’s bored of the norm and looking for something a bit different".











photography: patrick mcgreal
hair and makeup: max may

all images supplied exclusively to frockwriter by mezi jewellery

Tuesday, 28 June 2011

Bella Barber gets her best blue steel on for KAREN



Here is a first look at yet another edgy cover from Marian Simms' now Bali-based Australasian fashion title KAREN - issue #12, Winter 2012 This time shot by Troyt Coburn, styled by Michael Azzollini and starring Kiwi expat Annabella 'Bella' Barber. Repped by Nova in Auckland and Priscilla's in Sydney, Barber is rapidly emerging as an indie cover queen. This is her second KAREN cover and she has previously appeared on the covers of Oyster in Australia and No in New Zealand. Not to mention a recent cadaverous cameo in Kanye West's controversial new Monster video clip. Here is the accompanying editorial called 'Steel'. (And just a reminder that some some RSS subscribers may have problems viewing this photo gallery. Best to view on the blog). 


WordPress plugin






photography: troyt coburn
fashion editor: michael azzollini at DLM
makeup: angie barton at DLM
hair: diane gorgievski at the artist group

all images: supplied exclusively to frockwriter by KAREN magazine

Friday, 13 May 2011

Model citizens

julia nobis backstage at yeojin bae SS1112 in sydney


Although some sniffed that that there weren't enough big name international models, the swag of top local girls walking the runways of Rosemount Australian Fashion Week 2011 did the industry proud in frockwriter's opinion. They included those just returned from carving up the northern hemisphere runway circuit - Julia Nobis (above, backstage at Yeojin Bae), Lauren Brown, Myf Shepherd, Rose Smith, Alice Burdeu, Amanda Ware and Melissa 'MJ' Johannsen - and brand new faces such as Krystal Glynn and Hannah McDougall, who may well soon be heading that way. No, it's not your imagination that more Australian models than ever before are kicking it OS. Various international players have also clocked this antipodian runway trend. The Australian's Wish magazine recently commissioned a feature from me on the subject. It appears in the current May edition. Here's the story:



Portuguese, Dutch, Russian, English, South African, Latvian, Mandarin, Bellarusian, Korean…. so many different languages can be overheard backstage on the international runway circuit, you could be forgiven for thinking you had stumbled into a travelling United Nations fashion summit.

Once barely audible in this model polyglot, a specific English accent with an abrasive nasal twang is starting to reach critical mass.

It’s coming from the Australians, nearly 30 of whom walked in the Fall 2011 show season in New York, London, Milan and Paris in February and March. More often than not, they walked in the same shows with at least one or two other compatriots. Karl Lagerfeld cast five at Chanel in Paris. Giles Deacon cast eight at his show in London.

Australian models suddenly find themselves very much in demand.

Abbey Lee Kershaw and Miranda Kerr are currently ranked the world numbers five and six by New York-based website models.com, the unofficial industry authority. As distinct from Forbes’ annual Top Earning Models list - which placed Kerr as the world’s ninth highest-paid clotheshorse last year, earning US$4million - models.com calibrates its Top 50 Women rankings via covers, editorial visibility, campaigns and show bookings. Catherine McNeil is ranked #24 and Sudanese-born Ajak Deng just debuted at #39.

And hot on their heels, season after season, is a cadre of newcomers with the “It” factor.

According to models.com co-founder and editorial director Wayne Sterling, so many top models are emerging from Australia and now also New Zealand – with 17 year-old Kiwi Emily Baker widely viewed as Fall 2011’s top newcomer, grabbing 60 of its biggest shows - that Australasia has emerged as a top three scouting market alongside Russia and Holland.

“It's been building for two years now, somewhere around the emergence of Catherine McNeil and Abbey Lee, but I think this Fall Winter 2011 season is where it became a trend with major traction” says Sterling.

What is so appealing about the antipodians? Being low maintenance apparently tops the list of their positive attributes.

“Everybody wants beautiful girls who are slim but healthy, outgoing and easy to work with” notes Sterling.

“Australian girls are not bitches” says Stephen Lee, an Australian agent who works at Next Model Management in New York. “It’s [this attitude] ‘I’m not going to kill anyone’. There’s not this sense of desperation that was almost so formidable with the eastern Europeans”.

“The girls have a very natural beauty and ease about them, along with an incredible sense of confidence and wry humour. They are always a joy to be around and very professional" echoes Francisco Costa, Women's Creative Director of Calvin Klein Collection, who has cast Kershaw, Gemma Ward, Julia Nobis, Codie Young, Baker and fellow Kiwi Jessica Clarke. Kershaw also appears with Deng and Bambi Northwood-Blyth in the new ck One campaign and Jack Vanderhart was booked as an exclusive for Calvin Klein’s recent men’s show in New York.

“Australia is becoming a big player - there’s going to be a lot more than just the flavour of the next year or two” says New York casting director James Scully, whose clients include Oscar de la Renta, Stella McCartney, Lanvin and Tom Ford.

Adds Scully, “For a while we had Brazil, then Russia, then eastern Europe. It seems to be that a lot of the newer girls are coming from Australia and to be quite honest, I’m happier with these girls, because they’re older and they’re healthier than, or they appear to be healthier than, the girls who were coming from eastern Europe.

“A lot of girls from other countries don’t speak English. A lot of them start too young, whereas I feel like when you get girls from Australia, they’re a lot more finished. There is a different attitude. Every country has their kind of plusses and I find that Australian girls do definitely have a relaxed manner which makes them easier to work with”.

From blue-eyed blondes à la Kershaw to Sudanese gazelles like Deng and multi-ethnic bombshells in the form of Kerr, Megan Gale, Jessica Gomes and the incredibly unique Andrej Pejic – the Bosnian-born sensation who has proven himself equally adept at modelling menswear and womenswear – another factor by which Australians distinguish themselves is that apparently, unlike some other model nationalities, you can actually tell them apart.

“After doing this for a million years, I can tell the minute a girl walks through the door where she’s from” says Scully. “A lot of the times the Australian girls pretty much throw me off. If they don’t open their mouths I don’t necessarily know where they come from”.

Australian models are no strangers to the international stage.

In the 1960s, Maggi Eckhardt worked with Royal dressmaker Norman Hartnell in London and appeared on the covers of British and French Vogue. Lynn Sutherland made the cover of US Vogue in the 1970s.

Elle Macpherson became one of the most high profile models of the 1980s, appearing on, amongst a score of other magazine covers, three consecutive covers of Sports Illustrated’s annual Swimsuit issue.

A handful of new faces headed offshore in the 1990s. After moving to London, Adelaide-born Emma Balfour subsequently joined Kate Moss as one of the pivotal models of that decade, dubbed ‘the face of grunge’ by the British style press. Others were springboarded by a spate of new modelling competitions. Annaliese Seubert won Ford’s Supermodel of the World in 1990. Alyssa Sutherland won Australia’s Girlfriend Model Search in 1997 and Nicole Trunfio, the local Search For A Supermodel in 2002, before being crowned runnerup of Ford’s Supermodel of the World in the same year.

"When I started you could count the number of girls who were doing well on one hand, now there’s so many buzz girls around" says agent Joseph Tenni, who joined Sydney’s Chadwick Models in 1999, the year after he began writing the still-running Model Mania new faces column on New York-based fashion site Hintmag.

Over the past decade, faster air travel and the internet have brought Australia much closer to the rest of the world says Tenni.

“I remember [in the 1990s] if a foreign model was proposed, we’d get a phone call or a fax, then they’d send a bunch of pictures, a week-10 days later, we would go through those pictures and maybe if the girl’s not right, send them back again” he says. “These days, you stay on the phone together, click click click, ‘Um, yes, no’. The reaction is immediate. You can look at digitals and see exactly how a girl photographs, you can have walking videos”.

But key to the recent “Australian invasion”, says Wayne Sterling, are two factors: the infiltration of the New York fashion business by Australian agents Lee and Doll Wright and a “breakthrough girl” who emerged from the world's most isolated city in 2003.

“Gemma Ward is the founding goddess of the current fascination with Australian/New Zealand models. She changed the game." says Sterling, of the doe-eyed 15 year-old Perth native who was first scouted in late 2002 in her home town by Chris Fox at the Vivien's agency. Swiftly snapped up by IMG in New York and then Prada's casting director Russell Marsh, in September 2003 Ward was booked as a Spring 2004 season exclusive for both the Prada and Miu Miu shows. The following season, she was on every major runway.

Three years, a string of advertising contracts, over 30 Vogue covers and several runway clones later, Ward was earning US$3million a year according to Forbes’ 2007 Top Earning Models list. The same year, models.com crowned her its world number one.

The race was then on to find “the next Gemma”.

February 2005 saw the first large influx of Australian models at New York Fashion Week, including Miranda Kerr. Her big break would come the following year, when she was cast in the Victoria’s Secret runway show, leading to a lucrative contract with the US lingerie giant.

Tallulah Morton emerged at Australian Fashion Week in May 2005 at just 13, landing at New York Fashion Week one year later – a little too early according to some.

Catherine McNeil and Abbey Lee Kershaw, on the other hand, both spent three years finishing school and working at home after winning the Girlfriend Model Search in 2003 and 2004 at 14 and 16 respectively - the new faces competition operated in partnership with Sydney agency Chic Management, whose New York affiliate is Next Model Management.

Then in late 2006, McNeil signed a six-month exclusive contract with leading photographer Mario Testino, who shot her for the covers of V Magazine and Vogue Paris. One year later, Testino shot Kershaw for the Spring 2008 D&G campaign. At the times of their meetings with Testino, neither model had set foot on an international runway. They would subsequently emerge as the hot new girls of the Fall 2007 and 2008 seasons. The New York Times dubbed McNeil “fashion’s latest crush”. Kershaw booked 44 shows in her first season, including a Milan exclusive with Gucci, which would lead to six advertising campaigns with the company.

In late 2008, brand new Chic Management face Myf Shepherd emerged as one of the top new girls of the Spring 2009 season, booking 51 shows, from Prada to Balenciaga, Christian Dior and Gucci.

“For me it’s been 10 years in the making” says Lee, of the success of Australian models.

Does he think an Australian did a better job selling Australians to the world?

“Yes I do” says Lee, a former Chic Management booker who arrived in New York a decade ago. “Just like a Brazilian would understand the lifestyle of a Brazilian or a Russian would understand the lifestyle of a Russian girl”.

In 2008, a second Sydney agency, Priscillas Model Management, embedded its own former staffer at its New York affiliate Elite - Wright. [As this story was going to press, Wright had just resigned from Elite and was rumoured to be heading to Ford, with some of her Australian charges in tow].  

After some initial success with Alice Burdeu, the 2007 winner of Australia’s Next Top Model, in February 2010 Julia Nobis was launched via an exclusive New York Fashion Week booking for Calvin Klein. In her wake has come a string of other top Priscillas’ girls, including Northwood-Blyth, Lauren Brown, Ruby Jean Wilson and Dempsey Stewart.

“If suddenly you have someone that you know so well that’s sitting in an agency who’s coming [to Australia] all the time and saying , ‘Please get this girl on the plane, get this girl on the plane!’… suddenly the girl is on the plane and you can see what happens” says Wright. “The minute I saw Julia Nobis on their website, I knew that this girl was going to be a star. And I waited for a year, she was still in school. She obviously wasn’t ready…. You find these hidden gems and then all of a sudden, you pull them out of the bag”.

But it’s not only at the agencies where Australians have established a beachhead in New York. Models.com’s own New Faces Editor, Rosie Daley, is an Australian. Another Sydney expat, Kannon Rajah, has spent five years working in international fashion show production and casting and now has his own consultancy. In the past three seasons he has cast Australians at the shows of Versace, Yves Saint Laurent, Gareth Pugh, Joseph Altuzarra and Fendi.

“It’s like the Australian mafia” says Wright, “Someone actually said to me in Paris recently - it really made me laugh – ‘I don’t know, do you think we should keep focussing on Australia? Maybe you need to diversify a bit. What about Ethiopia?”

Among those scanning this week’s runways at Rosemount Australian Fashion Week has been a contingent of international scouts, hopeful of sniffing out more hidden gems to pull out of the bag.

On their watchlist will no doubt be The Agency’s Krystal Glynn – a 16 year-old from Penrith, who booked six editorials and was signed to New York agency DNA within days of being scouted whilst sunbaking on Bondi Beach in late March.

Already sucked into fashion’s hype vortex, should Glynn find herself spat out at the other end – if she’s lucky, with a million dollars banked by the age of 20 – at least she has the luxury of going back to where she started.

“This is a business that throws them against the wall” says Lee, of an intensely competitive industry that has witnessed at least a dozen model deaths since 2007, from eating disorders, drug overdoses and suicide. “So to understand that these girls, no matter how successful they are, could just give it all up and just go back and live on the beach in Australia…

“Half of my battle is keeping them in New York” he laughs. “Even myself. You wake up on a day like today and it’s snowing outside and you say, “Why the hell am I here?”

Monday, 7 March 2011

Aussie exclusive number two: Ruby Jean Wilson opens Yves Saint Laurent

yves saint laurent FW1112 backstage/sonny vandevelde
Twenty-four hours after unknown Sydney model Lydia Willemina Collins made an exclusive appearance at the Givenchy show at Paris Fashion Week, yet another Australian model has popped up on the Fall/Winter 2011/2012 radar at an equally prestigious French fashion show and also as an exclusive: Yves Saint Laurent. Scottish-born, UK-raised but now Terrigal, NSW-based 16 year-old Ruby Jean Wilson has only been seen twice so far over the past month - at Olivier Theysken's Theory show in New York, also on exclusive and at the Giles Deacon show at London Fashion Week. But Wilson didn't just walk in the Yves Saint Laurent show, she opened it (below) and she was flanked by some very big modelling names, including Abbey Lee Kershaw, the only other Australian in the show. What exactly is an "exclusive" show option? It means that the model may not appear in any other shows in that city prior to the exclusive - and more often than not, they may not appear anywhere else that season prior to being unveiled. With two other new antipodian faces, Codie Young and Dempsey Stewart, grabbing nearly 40 shows each in their first international season - including a slew of the most highly coveted designer name shows, such as Marc Jacobs, Calvin Klein and Lanvin - you have to wonder which is the best strategy. 

Repped by Priscillas in Sydney, Wilson walked in 12 shows at Rosemount Australian Fashion Week last May and then did a mere handful of lowkey shows at New York Fashion Week four months later.  

With hundreds of other models walking every international show season, it is extremely difficult to be noticed. 

Not only turning up in a bluechip show such as YSL, but opening it, however, tends to get the industry's attention. 


yves saint laurent FW1112 backstage/sonny vandevelde
yves saint laurent FW1112/nowfashion.com

Thursday, 20 January 2011

On their Marcs: Julia Nobis and Nick Hinman gear up to do battle on the high street



Are you ready for the battle of the Australian high street? The Portmans Autumn/Winter 2011 campaign starring world number 5 Abbey Lee Kershaw touches down next week. Grazia Australia apparently has first dibs on those shots. Mid market rival Marcs, meanwhile, has enlisted the less established, but equally cool Australian, Julia Nobis, for its second consecutive campaign. Shot by Swiss photographic duo Claudia Knoepfel and Stefan Indlekofer in Surry Hills and Woolloomooloo and styled by Caterina Scardino, the campaign co-stars Priscillas' stablemate Nick Hinman. And we must say, Marcs' military-nosed pea coats and trenches, roomy flannel shorts, leggings and sweet dresses never looked quite so good. Here is a selection of campaign images which are about to drop, in addition to a first look at a behind-the-scenes video taken on the shoot. 

 





all images and video: supplied to frockwriter by marcs

Thursday, 30 September 2010

Bambi bags Balenciaga - Spring/Summer 2011

balenciaga SS11/nowfashion.com
Did we say there was buzz about Bambi Northwood-Blyth going into Spring/Summer 2011? We did. Far more importantly, of course, so did Ashley Brokaw, one of the world’s top casting directors who started beating the Bambi drum in an interview with The New York Times’ Cathy Horyn on the eve of New York Fashion Week three weeks ago. And then cast her in her first international show, Rag & Bone, alongside Julia Nobis. Brokaw had told Horyn that both Northwood-Blyth and Nobis were at the top of her casting list this season. Well Brokaw has just cast the duo again - along with five months pregnant Miranda Kerr - this time, in the Balenciaga show in Paris. Given that Nobis already has one international show season under her belt and is regulation runway height, however, it’s nothing less than an extraordinary coup for Northwood-Blyth, who started modelling six months ago and also happens to be 5’7” tall – that’s the official version, with some suggesting she may in fact be 5’6”. How many girls have been turned down by model agents because they’re too small? Legions of them. Kate Moss is one of the rare exceptions and you have to say, Northwood-Blyth could be shaping up to be Australia’s version. 
 
She walked four shows in New York, two in London – second girl out at Giles Deacon and closing the Topshop Unique show. Balenciaga is of course far bigger news than any of the other shows. According to her mother agency, Priscillas, the Balenciaga option was in the pipeline for some time. Northwood-Blyth nearly blew it by blabbing to UK Vogue's blog - a post that was later removed.

Priscillas also reports that she is currently on hold for a major photographic name for a major international fashion title.  


Tuesday, 13 July 2010

First look: Julia Nobis and Broed Dillewaard for Marcs Spring Summer 2010/2011




In 1979, the late Marc Keighery founded Australian sportswear brand and retailer Marcs. Almost exactly two years to the day since Keighery lost his battle with cancer, frockwriter can reveal a new Marcs campaign for SS1011 - one of the best campaigns the brand has produced, if not the best. Shot by New York-based Australian photographer Beau Grealy in and around Sydney's iconic Harbour Bridge and the historic Rocks precinct, it stars two of Australia's hottest new modelling stars, Julia Nobis and Broed Dillewaard.

After making her runway debut with Calvin Klein in February - as a New York Fashion Week exclusive - Nobis continues her ascent, last week walking in Valentino's FW1011 haute couture show in Paris (as tipped by frockwriter; no sign, however, of Emily Wake who had been confirmed for the same show according to her mother agency Priscillas).

Dillewaard has just completed the mens Spring/Summer 2011 show season in Milan and Paris, where he walked for Louis Vuitton, Prada and Gazzarrini.












all images: supplied to frockwriter by marcs

Wednesday, 30 June 2010

The (lady) boys of Spring Summer 2011


wwd

Andrej Pejic may have only done four shows during the just-wrapped Paris menswear season, but he proved the talk of the town. Since frockwriter caught up with his news on Friday and Saturday, where hasn't he been? A spot in WWD (above), complete with the headline "Gender bender", Fairfax's WA Today and The New Zealand Herald (and The Sydney Morning Herald on July 3), while influential modelling website models.com asked on Facebook, "Andrej Pejic is getting a lot of buzz lately, do you like his look?". Profiles popped up on Pages Digital and Tokyo Dandy, with the Beauty Hunter blog asking “Is Andrej Pejic the most androgynous male model on the planet?”. On Twitter, MusaKL reported "Everyone in Paris last week kept talking about this one model from Down Under: Andrej Pejic", while Homotography noted "i keep getting asked who's the blond in these shows" and “Even professional fashion databases are mistaking Andrej Pejic for a girl!” According to photographer Antonio Barros, "he was the icon of this season".

The big question - will all this buzz translate into bigger bookings for Pejic?

Beyond the Facebook mention, the chatter did not appear to cut any mustard with models.com, which curiously left Pejic out of both its top walkers and Top 10 Newcomers lists for the SS11 menswear season.

According to his Australian mother agency Chadwicks, Pejic was already booked for one advertising campaign in Milan next week. There is as yet no update on other bookings. But frockwriter predicts we may well see him in some capacity at next week's haute couture shows in Paris. Yes, they are women's shows but men make the occasional appearance.

The New York Times' fashion critic Cathy Horyn, meanwhile, made no mention of Pejic in her review of the week, but she did seem a little perturbed by the feminisation of the collections, which featured skirt-like shorts - and even dresses at Comme des Garçons.

Noted Horyn:
"men are having a hard time, as Hanna Rosin observed in an article in the current issue of The Atlantic, its tag line, “How women are taking control — of everything.” Men are wimping out, in the example of Judd Apatow’s chronic adolescent characters, or being mowed down by Beyoncé and Lady Gaga....You sensed a little of this problem at the shows, and it was not a pretty sight".

At least two other Australian men walked the Spring/Summer 2011 runways. Priscillas has yet to confirm exact show numbers, but they report their very cool-looking Jakub Vasak walked in at least Alexander McQueen, while Broed Dillewaard nabbed Louis Vuitton, Prada and Gazzarrini.


jakub vasak at alexander mcqueen SS11/style.com



broed dillewaard at louis vuitton SS11/style.com


Below is a great little video on the boys of Paris Fashion Week just-posted by Paris-based photographer Justin Wu.

Pejic makes a very brief cameo at 1.57.





Thursday, 4 March 2010

Lauren Brown bags Balenciaga


nowfashion.com

Well Priscillas is having a great season. Frockwriter mentioned that the Sydney agency had three hot newcomers heading to the FW1011 show season. In addition to Christina Carey - who walked in the Marc Jacobs show in New York. And now, after Julia Nobis landed a Calvin Klein exclusive in New York, comes word (confirmed by Priscillas) that Lauren Brown has just walked in another equally prestigious show: Balenciaga. Fantastic get for Brown and Priscillas, which is presumably having a terrific day, following the news that a model Priscillas and its New York affiliate Elite unsuccessfully attempted to sign after Australia's Next Top Model Cycle 5 - Cassi van den Dungen - has just flown back to Oz after missing out on one of Paris Fashion Week's most high profile shows. With Brown apparently having already appeared at last week's Emporio Armani show in Milan, it does not appear to have been a season exclusive. Priscillas reports that Brown has been confirmed for only one other Paris show, as the arrangement with that show and Balenciaga was "semi exclusive" (ie in Paris). It's not the first time a Priscillas model has walked Balenciaga. Stephanie Carta made several appearances. But it's interesting that the agency didn't tip any media outlets in this leadup - as it did with Nobis in Milan, at least according to Pedestrian.tv, which ran a story about Nobis' future coup. Fortunately for Nobis, it didn't kill the option.

Thursday, 18 February 2010

Julia Nobis lands a Calvin Klein exclusive


calvin klein fw1011/getty via daylife


If there's one thing that trumps getting a spot in the Marc Jacobs show at New York Fashion Week, then it's landing an exclusive at Calvin Klein. Frockwriter mentioned that Priscilla's newbie Julia Nobis was a definite one to watch at New York Fashion Week, having been tipped by influential New York casting director Michelle Lee. Less than an hour ago in New York Nobis walked the second of two Calvin Klein shows - as no less than an exclusive (as confirmed by CK's Malcolm Carfrae). In modelspeak, Calvin Klein Collection is a queenmaker and if frockwriter is not mistaken, in terms of Australians, only Gemma Ward and Abbey Lee Kershaw have walked its runways before. Neither as an exclusive.

Monday, 15 February 2010

Christina Carey nabs Marc Jacobs


marc jacobs fw1011/style.com

Word just in from backstage at Marc Jacobs (via Sonny Vandevelde) is that Priscilla's Christina Carey is the only Australian model booked for the show (confirmed). The Marc Jacobs show, which is due to kick off at 12.00pm AEST (8.00pm EST), is one of the most prestigious modelling gigs at New York Fashion Week - if not the most prestigious. You can watch the show live stream on marcjacobs.com. Great get for Carey.

Thursday, 4 February 2010

Samantha Harris leads a new antipodian runway pack for Fall


samantha harris/antipodium

So the Fall/Winter 1011 shows are days from kicking off in New York. And the guessing game begins: which models will make their marks on the new season's runways? In terms of Australian talent, what a contrast to the lineup in just twelve months. Here is the tally of FW0910 shows walked by Australian models from March last year. At least two major names have been scratched from the lineup. Starting with Myf Shepherd, who is taking the year off to pursue fulltime studies at Sydney's College of Fine Arts - who walked more shows than any other Australian model this time last year. Ditto Tallulah Morton, who is studying Fine Arts.


Although Abbey Lee Kershaw bowed out of the last Fall shows due to an injury, she will, frockwriter predicts, continue her fashion ascendancy. She is now ranked world number 10 by models.com - surging past Catherine McNeil (now #14) to become Australia's biggest new modelling success story.

There is potentially some very exciting news surrounding one brand new Australian face, which this blog doesn't want to jinx by blabbing about just yet.

Meanwhile, the first indigenous Australian model is about to hit the international circuit: Samantha Harris. Harris arrived yesterday in London - skipping the New York shows, to ease her into things. Pending how London goes, Chic/Next may then send her to Milan and Paris. Harris features in an only girl editorial in Vogue Australia this month. And here she is also, above, in the new SS10 (Australian FW10) 'Ab Fab' campaign for Australian fashion brand Antipodium, which collaborated with several indigenous artists for the collection. And Harris will not be the only new Australian face at the shows.

New York will be another Chic-ette's first major league fashion week: Charlotte Lohmann. We have mentioned Lohmann several times before at Australian and New Zealand events. Here she is backstage at Trelise Cooper at Auckland's ANZFW in September:



Chadwicks' supremely androgynous Andre Pejic (below), meanwhile, is heading to London, yes for the womens' shows. Frockwriter predicts he may well wind up wearing some of that womenswear on the runway. After all, Antipodium opened its RAFW show in Sydney in May last year with Pejic. Pending the availability of both Pejic and Harris, one might assume we could see both at Antipodium's FW1011 presentation at LFW on Friday 19th February (presentation only).


RUSSH

Scene Models may have lost Tallulah Morton for the time being, but their new star appears to be Amelia Brown (below). The 17 year-old Perth-ite has been modelling for one year and her work to date includes RAFW shows and a January editorial in the local Grazia. Two days ago the latter Simon Lekias shoot wound up on models.com, which was in fact Brown's second models.com outing in seven months. Signed with Storm in London and Ford in New York, Scene director Vikki Graham reports that there is already quite some interest in Brown in New York. Now we now that "hold" does by no means equate to confirmed, but for what it's worth, Brown's New York Fashion Week holds thus far include Marc Jacobs, Marc by Marc Jacobs, Hervé Leger, Adam Lippes, Zac Posen, Isaac Mizrahi and Richard Chai.


grazia via models.com

Priscillas has three new faces heading to the shows, who are already generating buzz. No, Tahnee Atkinson is not one of them.

Lauren Brown recently featured on Models.com's The Ones To Watch. Topless.


luren brown/T02W

Cat Edwards (formerly with Chic) has an upcoming editorial in i-D with no less than Terry Richardson, which possibly guarantees that she was also topless.


cat edwards/ryanelitemodel2



And Julia Nobis was just nominated by influential New York casting director Michelle Lee on the LOVE magazine blog as a face to watch for the season - the second time in a month that Nobis featured on the LOVE blog. Here's what LOVE said about her on January 13:

"You saw her here first. Wait and see"



julia nobis/LOVE

Heading back to the shows with Kershaw are other seasoned international catwalkers such as Skye Stracke, Christina Carey, Georgie Wass and Emma Ishta.

Arguably the biggest mystery of New York Fashion Week is just where is Rachel Rutt?

After a stellar RAFW in Sydney last May and a great first New York season - and even comments about her "buzz" factor by models.com director Wayne Sterling in a New York interview recently done with Today Tonight - not only does Rutt not have a New York showcard this season, as spotted by TFS, she's not even listed on the Next Models website. Looking into it.

UPDATE: According to Chic Management Rutt is still "100%" with Next New York, but does not have a US visa, which is why she is not doing the shows. She is listed in the New Faces division of Next's London site and will be doing London Fashion Week.

One notable Chic-ette omission from the above post is Miranda Kerr who will, say frockwriter's sources, be heading at the very least to Paris, where she is already booked for a second run on Balenciaga's runway, on March 3. The same sources suggest Kerr may also make an appearance in Milan.