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Jimmy Choo Pre-Fall 2016 : Nadja Bender by Cass Bird
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Brianna
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Céline Pre-Fall 2016 : Frederikke Sofie Falbe-Hansen
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Michael Philouze - Stylist
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Céline Pre-Fall 2016
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Dennis Devoy - Hair Stylist
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Donald - Hair Stylist
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Vogue Russia July 2004 : Micky Olin by Koto Bolofo
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69th Annual Cannes Film Festival 2016

festival-cannes
Juries:
Main Competition
George Miller (President)
Arnaud Desplechin
Kirsten Dunst
Valeria Golino
Mads Mikkelsen
László Nemes
Vanessa Paradis
Katayoon Shahabi
Donald Sutherland
Un Certain Regard
Marthe Keller (President)
Jessica Hausner
Diego Luna
Ruben Östlund
Céline Sallette
Opening Night Film:
Café Society (Woody Allen, US)
In Competition
The Salesman (Asghar Farhadi, Iran)
Toni Erdmann (Maren Ade, German)
Julieta (Pedro Almodóvar, Spain)
American Honey (Andrea Arnold, UK)
Personal Shopper (Olivier Assayas, France)
The Unknown Girl (Luc and Jean-Pierre Dardenne, Belgium)
Its Only the End of the World (Xavier Dolan, Canada)
Ma Loute (Bruno Dumont, France)
Paterson (Jim Jarmusch, US)
Rester Vertical (Alain Guiraudie, France)
Aquarius (Kleber Mendonça Filho, Brazil)
Mal de Pierres (Nicole Garcia, Algeria)
I, Daniel Blake (Ken Loach, UK)
Ma Rosa (Brillante Mendoza, Philippines)
Bacalaureat (Cristian Mungiu, Romania)
Loving (Jeff Nichols, US)
The Handmaid (Park Chan-wook, South Korea)
The Last Face (Sean Penn, US)
Sieranevada (Cristi Puiu, Romania)
Elle (Paul Verhoeven, France)
The Neon Demon (Nicolas Winding Refn, US)
Un Certain Regard
Hell or High Water (David Mackenzie, UK)
Varoonegi (Behnam Behzadi, Iran)
Apprentice (Boo Junfeng, Singapore)
Voir du Pays (Delphine Coulin and Muriel Coulin, France)
La Danseuse (Stéphanie Di Giusto)
Eshtebak (Mohamed Diab, Egypt)
La Tortue Rogue (Michael Dudok de Wit, Netherlands)
Fuchi Ni Tatsu (Kôji Fukada, Japan)
Omor Shakhsiya (Maha Haj)
MeEver Laharim Vehagvoat (Eran Kolirin, Israel)
After the Storm (Kore-eda Hirokazu, Japan)
The Man who Smiled (Juho Kuosmanen, Finland)
La Larga Noche De Francisco Sanctis (Francisco Márquez & Andrea Testa)
Caini (Bogdan Mirică)
Pericle Il Nero (Stefano Mordini, Italy)
The Transfiguration (Michael OShea, US)
Captain Fantastic (Matt Ross, US)
Out of Competition
The BFG (Steven Spielberg, US)
Money Monster (Jodie Foster, US)
The Nice Guys (Shane Black, US)
Goksun (Na Hong-Jin, South Korea)
LUltima Spaggia (Thanos Anastopoulos and Davide Del Degan, Greece and Italy)
Midnight Screenings:
Gimme Danger (Jim Jarmusch, US)
The Train to Bu-San (Yeon Sang-Ho, South Korea)
Blood Father (Jean-François Richet, France)
Special Screenings:
The Death of Louis XIV (Albert Serra, Spain)
Hissène Habré, Une Tragédie Tchadienne (Mahamat-Saleh Haroun, Chad)
Le Cancre (Paul Vecchiali, France)
Exile (Rithy Panh, Cambodia)
Wrong Elements (Jonathan Littell, US)
La Foret de Quinconces (Grégoire Leprince-Ringuet, France)
Chouf (Karim Dridi, France)
Full list of movies and more info: http://festival-cannes.com/en
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Fernanda Beuker
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webcomic about modeling
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Vogue Russia June 2016 : Adèle Exarchopoulos by Patrick Demarchelier
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François Van Hecke
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The 7 Habits of Highly Stylish People
The 7 Habits of Highly Stylish People
by PERRIE SAMOTIN
Heres a fact: Anyone with a credit card can stroll into Barneys and emerge looking like Fashion with a capital F. But heres another one: Very few peoplecredit cards or notcan be considered women of genuine style.
Yes, draping yourself in the coolest labels and piling on It items might give you a boost of instant sartorial gratification, but in six months those pieces will be obsolete, youll be out a months rent, and youll feel compelled to keep up with the cycle of buying the next round of coveted pieces. Exhausting! Still, so many women seem to be falling victim to that exact cycle.
Blame it on todays street style-obsessed world, but all we have to do today is take a quick peek at Pinterest, give Instagram a quick scroll, or visit any one of the gazillion personal style blogs that exist, and well be inundated with up-to-the-minute images of Céline, Proenza Schouler, Givenchy, Chanel, and other top-level labels, which can often create a bit of FOMO. And that, in turn, can result in scores of young women looking, well, exactly like everyone else and going broke in the process.
Then, however, there are those images youll see on blogs or street style sites of women who look so amazingly chic, cool, or interesting who arent covered in head-to-toe labels, but rather know how to take nondescript pieces and style them in such a way that their whole look is completely enviable and covetable.
These, friends, are the truly stylish women from whom we should aim to take our fashion inspiration. To that end, weve compiled the 7 habits of highly stylish people to get you started.
1. They dont surf street style blogs and copy exactly what they see, label for label.
In this day and age, street style photos are a bona fide source of fashion inspiration. In fact, we spend a pretty hefty portion of our day stalking Pinterest and culling various galleries to offer our readers (and ourselves) great ideas when it comes to seasonal outfits.
However, just because you saw Taylor Tomasi Hill, Miroslava Duma, or Anya Zirhouva draped in Kenzo, Chanel, or Célineor because youll be in New York during Fashion Week and want to get snapped by Phil Ohisnt a great reason to go out and splurge on the same stuff.
Dont forget: Several big street-fashion players, editors, and bloggers get sent designer stuff for free to entice folks like us to go out and buy it. Others are, well, richer than us and its their day job to flit around the world in the latest designer clothes, which is fun to admire but not necessarily healthy to emulate.
Thats why truly stylish girls will see a look theyre drawn to and seek out lesser-priced pieces that have the same vibe. Plenty of affordable stores and sites offer items that feature similar aspects to designer pieces.
2. They arent afraid of any storeand can find something almost anywhere.
Legitimately stylish women will troll anyand we mean anystore with zero snob factor, yet they manage to stay true to their aesthetic.
For example, she wont be afraid to pop into a cheesy-seeming teen store at the mall, but that doesnt mean shell leave with the same things her 12-year-old cousin would. Same goes for fast-fashion haunts like Forever 21, dusty old thrift stores, and off-price havens like TJ Maxx, Marshalls, and Century 21, which are consistently packed with great stuff at non-sucker prices.
3. They know how to style themselves according to their own taste.
Isnt it always the case that the most stylish girls will say This blouse? Its from Goodwill, like, 100 years ago and actually mean it?
Yeah, the blouse itself is probably pretty cool, but its really the way she styled itmaybe she tucked into great-fitting jeans, unbuttoned one extra button, rolled up the sleeves, and added a killer pair of statement earringsthat made everyone comment on it.
4. They always look a littles less done than everyone else.
Highly stylish people are often in the habit of always appearing a teeny tiny bit too cool for every scenario theyre in.
This might mean wearing a pair of slip-on sneakers when every other girl is teetering on sky-high heels, wearing a chic skinny pantsuit when every other woman is rocking glittery party dresses, or chopping her hair into a messy bob when everyone else has long beachy waves. Small things that always make them look a little less done.
5. They understand labels dont make them cooler.
It sounds cliché, but the most stylish womenand men, for that matterin the world are ones who have confidence, and who know they dont need the $700 sweatshirt or $2,000 handbag to make themselves appear cool.
These folks can step out in a faded gray tee and jeans and still look like the coolest person in the room all because they have confidence (okay fine, and probably a killer haircut, too.)
6. They arent slaves to fashion.
Some of the most stylish people are able to have fun with fashion and follow trends without looking like a slave. If you dont like a trendeven if every blogger under the sun is wearing itdont buy into it. Its that simple.
7. They dont dress to be considered stylish.
Before blogs, before street style, and before Fashion Week became a three-ring circus that only matters for those who have the most attention-grabbing clothing, young women dressed for themselves, their lifestyle, and what looked good on them.
Believe us: It doesnt matter if those heels are Alexander Wangif you cant walk in them, you wont be considered stylish. Throw on a pair of comfortable ankle boots with that mini dress, youll look much cooler.
stylecaster.com
by PERRIE SAMOTIN
Heres a fact: Anyone with a credit card can stroll into Barneys and emerge looking like Fashion with a capital F. But heres another one: Very few peoplecredit cards or notcan be considered women of genuine style.
Yes, draping yourself in the coolest labels and piling on It items might give you a boost of instant sartorial gratification, but in six months those pieces will be obsolete, youll be out a months rent, and youll feel compelled to keep up with the cycle of buying the next round of coveted pieces. Exhausting! Still, so many women seem to be falling victim to that exact cycle.
Blame it on todays street style-obsessed world, but all we have to do today is take a quick peek at Pinterest, give Instagram a quick scroll, or visit any one of the gazillion personal style blogs that exist, and well be inundated with up-to-the-minute images of Céline, Proenza Schouler, Givenchy, Chanel, and other top-level labels, which can often create a bit of FOMO. And that, in turn, can result in scores of young women looking, well, exactly like everyone else and going broke in the process.
Then, however, there are those images youll see on blogs or street style sites of women who look so amazingly chic, cool, or interesting who arent covered in head-to-toe labels, but rather know how to take nondescript pieces and style them in such a way that their whole look is completely enviable and covetable.
These, friends, are the truly stylish women from whom we should aim to take our fashion inspiration. To that end, weve compiled the 7 habits of highly stylish people to get you started.
1. They dont surf street style blogs and copy exactly what they see, label for label.
In this day and age, street style photos are a bona fide source of fashion inspiration. In fact, we spend a pretty hefty portion of our day stalking Pinterest and culling various galleries to offer our readers (and ourselves) great ideas when it comes to seasonal outfits.
However, just because you saw Taylor Tomasi Hill, Miroslava Duma, or Anya Zirhouva draped in Kenzo, Chanel, or Célineor because youll be in New York during Fashion Week and want to get snapped by Phil Ohisnt a great reason to go out and splurge on the same stuff.
Dont forget: Several big street-fashion players, editors, and bloggers get sent designer stuff for free to entice folks like us to go out and buy it. Others are, well, richer than us and its their day job to flit around the world in the latest designer clothes, which is fun to admire but not necessarily healthy to emulate.
Thats why truly stylish girls will see a look theyre drawn to and seek out lesser-priced pieces that have the same vibe. Plenty of affordable stores and sites offer items that feature similar aspects to designer pieces.
2. They arent afraid of any storeand can find something almost anywhere.
Legitimately stylish women will troll anyand we mean anystore with zero snob factor, yet they manage to stay true to their aesthetic.
For example, she wont be afraid to pop into a cheesy-seeming teen store at the mall, but that doesnt mean shell leave with the same things her 12-year-old cousin would. Same goes for fast-fashion haunts like Forever 21, dusty old thrift stores, and off-price havens like TJ Maxx, Marshalls, and Century 21, which are consistently packed with great stuff at non-sucker prices.
3. They know how to style themselves according to their own taste.
Isnt it always the case that the most stylish girls will say This blouse? Its from Goodwill, like, 100 years ago and actually mean it?
Yeah, the blouse itself is probably pretty cool, but its really the way she styled itmaybe she tucked into great-fitting jeans, unbuttoned one extra button, rolled up the sleeves, and added a killer pair of statement earringsthat made everyone comment on it.
4. They always look a littles less done than everyone else.
Highly stylish people are often in the habit of always appearing a teeny tiny bit too cool for every scenario theyre in.
This might mean wearing a pair of slip-on sneakers when every other girl is teetering on sky-high heels, wearing a chic skinny pantsuit when every other woman is rocking glittery party dresses, or chopping her hair into a messy bob when everyone else has long beachy waves. Small things that always make them look a little less done.
5. They understand labels dont make them cooler.
It sounds cliché, but the most stylish womenand men, for that matterin the world are ones who have confidence, and who know they dont need the $700 sweatshirt or $2,000 handbag to make themselves appear cool.
These folks can step out in a faded gray tee and jeans and still look like the coolest person in the room all because they have confidence (okay fine, and probably a killer haircut, too.)
6. They arent slaves to fashion.
Some of the most stylish people are able to have fun with fashion and follow trends without looking like a slave. If you dont like a trendeven if every blogger under the sun is wearing itdont buy into it. Its that simple.
7. They dont dress to be considered stylish.
Before blogs, before street style, and before Fashion Week became a three-ring circus that only matters for those who have the most attention-grabbing clothing, young women dressed for themselves, their lifestyle, and what looked good on them.
Believe us: It doesnt matter if those heels are Alexander Wangif you cant walk in them, you wont be considered stylish. Throw on a pair of comfortable ankle boots with that mini dress, youll look much cooler.
stylecaster.com
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Waste Not, Want Not - Upcycling
Upcycling, also known as creative reuse, is the process of transforming by-products, waste materials, useless and/or unwanted products into new materials or products of better quality or for better environmental value.
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Clare Walker
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Max Mara Studio S/S 16 : Joséphine Le Tutour by Giampaolo Sgura

models.com
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Daan
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Jordan Wain
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Wilf
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