Cocot-shirt - THE BODACIOUS PERIOD SLIM FIT SHIRT
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Room for Discussion It wouldnt be a Vogue runthrough without bright colors bold shapesand one very discerning figure… It wouldn’t be a Vogue run-through without bright colors, bold shapes—and one very discerning figure behind that desk. Model Yumi Nu, clad in a goddess gown by Alejandra Alonso Rojas, fits the THE BODACIOUS PERIOD SLIM FIT SHIRT besides I will buy this bill as Vogue’s Alexandra Michler (far left, in Proenza Schouler) and designer Christopher John Rogers work with Rogers’s latest collection. Lola Leon, daughter of Madonna, has followed in her mother’s footsteps as a dancer and an advocate for LGBTQ+ rights, but in all other respects stubbornly insists on cutting her own path. Yai, born in Egypt while her family awaited political asylum in the U.S. and now a muse to designers such as Valentino’s Pierpaolo Piccioli, took up martial arts during the pandemic but also likes to paint, drawing inspiration from Renaissance masters. A similar creative streak runs through Sherry Shi, though her taste favors anime—she might become an animator, she says. Yumi Nu is a singer-songwriter who just released the summery single “Pots & Pans” and plans on launching an ethical plus-size clothing line; Kaia Gerber reads books backstage at fashion shows and forged her close friendship with Ariel Nicholson out of a mutual dislike of small talk. “We like talking about ideas,” says Nicholson, a budding writer and actor. Bella Hadid likes to journal in the form of poetry—“It’s a way of getting at my emotions without it being total nonsense,” she explains—and Precious Lee really likes her hometown, championing Atlanta as a cultural nerve center to rival New York and L.A. (“You’ve got to come down and see what’s going on here,” she insists.) What all these women share, however, is a fierce desire not to be pigeonholed.
Shes Got the THE BODACIOUS PERIOD SLIM FIT SHIRT besides I will buy this Look Castings a breeze when Bellas onboard. Model Bella Hadid does sportif Americana in a slinky Proenza… Casting’s a breeze when Bella’s onboard. Model Bella Hadid does sportif Americana in a slinky Proenza Schouler dress—giving Vogue’s Lucas O’Brien and Willow Lindley exceptionally good face while she’s at it. (Vogue’s Taylor Angino, meanwhile, exits the scene.) “People think I’m this talentless rich kid who’s had everything given to her, but I’m not,” says Leon. As we speak, the 24-year-old is slouched on a sofa in a corner of the Vogue offices, her firm eyebrows knit and fists curled as if anticipating a punch. As she runs down a list of ways she’s independent from her mother (she paid for college herself; she lives in Bushwick so she can disappear into its polyglot creative community), it’s like she’s aiming bullets at a cardboard caricature of herself—an attitude that vanishes as soon as Leon is asked about her dancing. “A teacher of mine made me understand movement in a whole new way,” says Leon, her face now open, her edges softened. “You’re using your body to define the space around you—to change it. That’s a very naked form of expression,” she adds. Using your body to change the space around you. This, it so happens, is a supremely apt description of the role Precious Lee and Yumi Nu have been thrust into. Lee is one of the few plus-size Black women to appear on the cover of Vogue, Nu the first plus-size Asian-American. Their very flesh is charged with cultural significance—a situation Lee mostly shrugs off with characteristic aplomb, noting that “Black women have always embraced their curves,” but that Nu admits she finds both liberating and constricting. “I cherish the platform I’ve been given, and it makes me happy—like, so happy—to know there are larger Asian-American girls who can look at me and see themselves,” says Nu. “But—I guess there’s a part of me that feels like——” she breaks off, filling the silence with a gentle smile, and then chooses her words carefully. “Labels can be limiting. In an ideal world, maybe we wouldn’t have them.”
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