Predict Style.com's Top Ten New Faces for S/S 08

I am not sure on my final list yet but I have a strong feeling that Toni Garn will definetly not be there.

At the moment I have the same doubts in regards to Toni (Hence my earlier "I think she might be overlooked" comment)...but I think in order to balance the list in terms of agencies, there might be some insistence on her presence. If she were to be removed I imagine that Masha T. (Also from Women) might take her place.

ETA: Note that Marilyn Paris managed to get ahold of (Perhaps) the three most deserving new faces on the list! Ali, Karlie, and Siri will bring about bright futures for the agency, that's for sure.
 
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Isn't Karlie 15? I remember reading that Chanel Iman had to skip the weekend shows her first season cause of the rules in Paris. :flower:
 
^Karlie was (Very much) in Saturday shows, though, so that's confusing. And Agnete is supposedly 18/19...
 
^You're not alone -- I was just thinking about that yesterday! They've actually used runway details shots before (Ekaterina K. and Michaela K. for example), but I can't really remember whether Adina even had that...

Just had a look, and she does have a backstage shot from Miu Miu - although not the most flattering....


style
 
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:lol: At least she's now "ready for her close-up" in case she's included on the list!
 
^Karlie was (Very much) in Saturday shows, though, so that's confusing. And Agnete is supposedly 18/19...
I thought it was just Sundays? That would make sense as they actually seem to follow that rule... occasionally, at least... :rolleyes:

No idea about Agnete, though....
 
^If it is just Sundays -- I think I remember reading weekend in the initial news article, but definitions can be stretched -- then it makes perfect sense for Karlie. Rules are rules in the end (Sometimes)!
 
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^ I've actually heard both... so I'm not sure either... but it would indeed be a logical explanation for Karlie.

My list:

Adina Forisz / IMG
Ali Stephens / Elite
Karlie Kloss / Elite
Kori Richardson / IMG
Laura Blokhina / DNA
Lera Sheremeta / Supreme
Meghan Collison / Supreme (Georgia proved last season that it's not solely based on runway...)
Siri Tollerod / Trump
Taryn Davidson / DNA
Toni Garrn / Women

Not the strongest showing from Women/Supreme... I reckon at least two girls will make the list, but neither Lera nor Toni (it would make sense to save her for next season) are safe bets for me...

Anabela, Masha, and Sheila are all deserving candidates as very successful first-full-seasoners, but like someone pointed out, I'm not sure you still count as new if you already scored major campaigns and/or high profile editorials in the wake of last season...

Interesting to see so many N. Americans... and I'm not counting out Heidi Mount either. I think she's been too successful too long ago, but talk about a breakthrough...

I guess Viviane has a fair chance too... but even though I like her, I barely notice her in most shows... And again, this is her fourth(?) season...

Ford has Agnete, and Marilyn has at least two outside chances with Heatherton and Novoselova, but NO realistic candidates from ONE (unless they somehow deem Denisa new enough) or NEXT....
 
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My list.. which might change

(in no order)

Toni Garrn
Siri Tollerod
Adina Forisz
Sheila Marquez (I think they will give her a shout out this season)
Heidi Mount
Ali Stephens
Taryn Davidson
Karlie Kloss
Laura Blokhina
Kori Richardson
 
I'm going to update my list

1. Ali Stephens
2. Siri Tollerod
3. Taryn Davidson
4. Karlie Kloss
5. Viviane Orth
6. Erin Heatherton
7. Agnete Heglund
8. Lera Sheremeta- style.com mentioned her on their blog, so i think she might be on the list as well.
9. Meghan Collison -might be on my list even though she didn't do as many shows as we thought she would, style.com also mentioned her on their blog.
10. either Adina Forisz or Kori Richardson

And sadly, I have a feeling Heidi Mount won't make the list even though she was on basically every major runway.
 
i will say that this is what they will do
sometimes they have people on there either twice or that are four seasons old
but here goes, no specific order.

-Adina (IMG)
-Karlie Kloss (elite)
-Anabela (IMG)
-Masha T(Women)
-Meghan Collison (Supreme)
-Lera (Supreme)
-Taryn Davidson (DNA)
-Ali Stephens (Elite NY)
-Erin Heatherton (Marilyn)
-Siri Tollerod (TRUMP)

we'll see, we'll see
it is funny how we are always so curious yet never suprised.
:smile:
 
Mashas, Lera, Tayn, Toni, Karlie, Siri, Ali S, &

Maybe Heidi Mount & Vivianne Orth
 
From Models.com...this is REALLY suprising, honestly, mostly because Egle is HARDLY a newcomer, and she has had some pretty nice success before. I doubt she'd ever make Style's list but I thought I'd post this anyway:

egleshowcard2.jpg


Egle/Major Model Management, FM Agency (London) . Image courtesy of Major (Paris)

The signals started to glimmer in London but it was Paris that made Major’s Egle a star this season. From Givenchy to Balenciaga, Dior and Vuitton, Egle sparked her path down some of the most coveted runways in the business. The beautiful thing about this 19 year old’s narrative is that her overnight success was four years in the making. Due to the diligence of her agents, Katia Sherman in New York and Anthony Bourgois in Paris who kept the faith in those four years that allowed Egle to finish school and fully evolve as a model, this girl now sits at the nexus of some serious editorial and campaign bookings. Its very encouraging to see that the industry did indeed wait on the awkward fifteen year old Lithuanian until she grew into the graceful runway swan that she is now. Her visage was all the kiosks of Paris as the cover star as L’Officiel but as visible as she was Egle still remained disciplined and focused on making sure she was prompt and professional for every Paris casting, fitting and show. OTM was hunting for tips on where you’d find a girl most wanted hanging out socially, “Sushi Bou Bou, a very intimate and cosy Japoanese restaurant downstairs to my apartment, but sorry, I can’t give the address or it will become too popular,”said our Top 10 Newcomer with a smile and a wink. Speaking of popular, that is exactly what Egle is about to be and in a massive way too. Stay tuned!
 
I think this is a really interesting article because we are talking about predicting style.com's top ten girls and there is NO diversity. (And no hair color doesn't count)

Runways Fade to White


14race600.1.jpg


By GUY TREBAY
Published: October 14, 2007

IN the days of blithe racial assumptions, flesh crayons were the color of white people. “Invisible” makeup and nude pantyhose were colored in the hues of Caucasian skin. The decision by manufacturers to ignore whole segments of humanity went unchallenged for decades before the civil rights movement came along and nonwhite consumers started demanding their place on the color wheel.

Nowadays the cultural landscape is well populated with actors, musicians, media moguls and candidates for the American presidency drawn from the 30 percent of the American population that is not white. Yet, if there is one area where the lessons of chromatic and racial diversity have gone largely unheeded, it is fashion. This reality was never plainer than during the recent showings of the women’s spring 2008 collections in New York and Europe.


Although black women in the United States spend more than $20 billion on apparel each year, according to estimates by TargetMarketNews.com, it was hard to discern an awareness of this fact on the part of designers showing in New York, where black faces were more absent from runways than they have been in years.


Of the 101 shows and presentations posted on Style.com during the New York runway season, which ended a month ago, more than a third employed no black models, according to Women’s Wear Daily. Most of the others used just one or two. When the fashion caravan moved to London, Paris and Milan, the most influential shows — from Prada to Jil Sander to Balenciaga to Chloé and Chanel — made it appear as if someone had hung out a sign reading: No Blacks Need Apply.


“It’s the worst it’s ever been,” said Bethann Hardison, a former model who went on to start a successful model agency in the 1980s that promoted racial diversity.


AMONG the people she represented were Naomi Campbell and Tyson Beckford, the chiseled hunk who broke barriers in the 1990s by becoming the unexpected symbol of the country-club fantasia that is a Ralph Lauren Polo campaign.


“It’s heartbreaking for me now because the agents send the girls out there to castings and nobody wants to see them,” said Ms. Hardison, referring to black models. “And if they do, they’ll call afterward and say, ‘Well, you know, black girls do much better in Europe, or else black girls do much better in New York, or we already have our black girl.’”


Last month in New York, Ms. Hardison convened a panel of fashion experts at the Bryant Park Hotel to discuss “The Lack of the Black Image in Fashion Today,” an event she will reprise Monday at the New York Public Library on 42nd Street. “Modeling is probably the one industry where you have the freedom to refer to people by their color and reject them in their work,” she said.


The exclusion is rarely subtle. An agent for the modeling firm Marilyn once told Time magazine of receiving requests from fashion clients that baldly specified “Caucasians only.”


The message is not always so blatant these days, but it is no less clear. Take for example the case of two young models, one white, one black, both captivating beauties at the start of their careers. Irina Kulikova, a feline 17-year-old Russian, appeared on no fewer than 24 runways in New York last month, a success she went on to repeat in Milan with 14 shows, and in Paris with 24 more. Honorine Uwera, a young Canadian of Rwandan heritage, was hired during the New York season for just five runway shows.
While Ms. Uwera’s showing was respectable, it was not enough to justify the cost to her agency of sending her to Europe, where most modeling careers are solidified.


“We represent a lot of ethnic girls,” said Ivan Bart, the senior vice president of IMG Models, which represents a roster of the commercially successful models of the moment, among them black superstars like Alek Wek, Ms. Campbell and Liya Kebede.


“We have new girls, too,” Mr. Bart added, young comers like Ms. Uwera, Quiana Grant and Mimi Roche. “We include them in our show package, give them the same promotion as any other girl, and get the same responses: ‘She’s lovely, but she’s not right for the show.’”



Although, in fact, Ms. Roche and Ms. Grant, both black, were seen on runways in the last five weeks, the reality was that only one black model worked at anything like the frequency of her white counterparts: Chanel Iman Robinson, 17, who is African-American and Korean. Particularly in Milan and Paris, Ms. Robinson’s was often the only nonwhite face amid a blizzard of Eastern European blondes.


It is not just a handful of genetically gifted young women who are hurt by this exclusion. Vast numbers of consumers draw their information about fashion and identity from runways, along with cues about what, at any given moment, the culture decrees are the new contours of beauty and style.

“Years ago, runways were almost dominated by black girls,” said J. Alexander, a judge on “America’s Next Top Model,” referring to the gorgeous mosaic runway shows staged by Hubert de Givenchy or Yves Saint Laurent in the 1970s. “Now some people are not interested in the vision of the black girl unless they’re doing a jungle theme and they can put her in a grass skirt and diamonds and hand her a spear.”

And some people, said Diane Von Furstenberg, the designer and president of the Council of Fashion Designers of America, “just don’t think about it at all.” Ms. Von Furstenberg herself has always employed models of all ethnicities on her runways. (This September, she hired seven black women, more perhaps than any single label except Baby Phat and Heatherette.) Yet she is increasingly the exception to an unspoken industry rule.

“I always want to do that,” she said, referring to the casting of women of color. “I can make a difference. We all can. But so much is about education and to talk about this is an important beginning.”

But isn’t it strange, she was asked, that she would have to invoke the rhetoric of racial inclusiveness at a time when Oprah Winfrey is the most powerful woman in media, and Barack Obama is running for president?

“Why did we go backward?” Ms. Von Furstenberg asked.
Agents blame designers for the current state of affairs. Designers insist agents send them nothing but skinny blondes. Magazine editors bemoan the lack of black women with the ineffable attributes necessary to put across the looks of a given season.

The current taste in models is for blank-featured “androids,” whose looks don’t offer much competition to the clothes, pointed out James Scully, a seasoned agent who made his mark casting the richly diverse Gucci shows in the heyday of Tom Ford. In today’s climate, it is far more difficult to promote a black woman than her white counterpart.

“You want to sell the model on the basis of her beauty, not her race,” said Kyle Hagler, an agent at IMG. Yet when he sends models out on casting calls based on what he terms a “beauty perspective,” omitting any mention to potential clients of race, “You always get a call back saying, ‘You didn’t tell me she was black.’”

THE reasons for this may seem obvious, and yet the unconscious bigotry is tricky to pin down.
“I’m not pointing a finger and saying people are racist,” said Ms. Hardison, who nevertheless recounted a recent exchange with the creative director of a major fashion label: “She said to me, ‘I have to be honest with you, when a girl walks in, I just don’t see color.’ Meanwhile, they have one girl, or more likely, none in their show.”

Ms. Hardison explained: “‘I don’t see color?’ Does that mean, you don’t want to see?”
There is something illustrative of the entire issue, and the state of the industry, to be found in this September’s Italian Vogue.

Just one image of a black model appears in the issue, midway through a 17-page article photographed by Miles Aldridge and titled the “Vagaries of Fashion.” In it, the glacial blond Anja Rubik portrays an indolent, overdressed Park Avenue princess with a gilded apartment, a couture wardrobe, two towhead children and a collection of heavy rocks. The sole black model in the pictorial is more modestly attired, in an aproned pinafore.
She plays the maid.



nytimes.com
 
Gosh, such a great article. Thanks so much! I was hoping we weren't the only ones noticing the trend this season...it was definitely my personal conclusion after making my top ten list. I remember those in the magazine threads briefly discussing the Vogue Italia September instance (As noted in the last paragraph of the article) as well!
 
Its funny, because I was looking through my list of twelve names...and noticed that there was not an ounce of diversity amongst them. Which is a shame for girls like Kinee Diouf last season and Gaye McDonald this season, who really started to make names for themselves. Thanks for the information.
 
Sort of OT, but it appears that Angus Munro is doing his Top 10 list again this season...

Usually more relevant than MDC or style.com, or at least more interesting, since he actually justifies his picks and provides some interesting tidbits, not just "This sweet swede/emerging star/stealth sensation was everywhere this season, stirring up a booking frenzy if we ever saw one. Instant blue chip! Stay tuned!"... :rolleyes:

10.11.07 MODEL MARKET: NEW YORK AND LONDON SPRING 2008
Angus Munro reports on the movers and shakers of next season

In terms of casting and models, Spring 2008 has seen a distinct and exciting shift away from what was becoming a rather staid formula. In New York, it became clear that clients were open to moving away from the model establishment and happy to freshen up their casting and take a few risks. The shows I cast for Preen and Narciso were real hits for very different reasons. We put together a very feline casting for Narciso in an attempt to better match his sexy, young, and ultra-wearable aesthetic. Preen on the other hand, showing for the first time in NYC, wanted to arrive with a bang so we gave them a heavyweight sexy casting that we hope helped them open everyone’s eyes to the sensual, superhip Preen woman.

Calvin Klein really got their casting spot-on and set the scene for the rest of the season. The girls were elegant but with a bias towards the fresh and the new. This was evident in exclusives for some of the most exciting new girls of the season—Taryn Davidson, Karlie Kloss, and Toni Garrn.

London was a difficult city in which to cast as many girls decided to miss it out due to getting burned during a rather frought New York week that was struggling to make the new calendar work. In addition to this, the U.K. immigration department warned that any models without working visas would be deported. Hardly the most sensible of attitudes for a city trying desperately to revive its fashion week. However, it did allow for a newer girl bias that underlined (albeit falsely) the emerging trend.

Check back next week for more news and casting trends, as well as a countdown of the top 10 girls that matter.
vmagazine.com
 
Usually more relevant than MDC or style.com, or at least more interesting, since he actually justifies his picks and provides some interesting tidbits, not just "This sweet swede/emerging star/stealth sensation was everywhere this season, stirring up a booking frenzy if we ever saw one. Instant blue chip! Stay tuned!"... :rolleyes:

I love you! Agnus Munro certainly provides a more substantiated basis for his selections. I'll be interested to see who he includes actually, as there are a few girls that are hard to call at this moment.
 

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