Today, in the first installment of Cover Stories, we explore the story behind the March cover of 
Details. As   the luxury menswear market continues to grow, an elite group of male   models are leaving behind the traditional confines of namelessness and   emerging as brands in and of themselves. Will they become household   names?
                 
NEW YORK, United States — The March cover of men’s magazine 
Details,   set to hit newsstands on February 10th, doesn’t feature a leading   actor, musician or sportsman. “Men are their own tastemakers now and the   
Details  reader doesn’t necessarily need to see it on an actor  or an athlete in  order to find a way to connect with fashion,” Dan  Peres, editor-in-chief  of 
Details,  told BoF. Instead, gracing  the magazine’s gatefold cover are Sean  O’Pry, Clement Chabernaud and  Garrett Neff, along with seven more of the  world’s most successful male  models. To the general public, these names  remain relatively unknown.  But with the luxury menswear market growing  at roughly double the pace  of womenswear and a distinct uptick in media  interest in men’s fashion,  could these “top boys” one day command the  kind of household  recognition as female supermodels like 
Kate Moss and 
Naomi Campbell?
 “These guys are really recognizable. You see them when you cross the   street here in New York City. They are going by on buses. These are the   guys that are on billboards and in the huge images in shop windows,”   continued Peres. “Men’s fashion is stronger than it has ever been in   terms of what the offerings are, but also in terms of dollars and cents   and as a business. This cover is an acknowledgement of the  extraordinary  work that luxury houses are doing on behalf of men and  the  extraordinary way that this category is growing and blossoming.”
 “The industry has definitely come to a crossroads,” said casting   director Edward Kim of the Edit Desk, who works with publications   including 
Arena Homme+ and 
Dazed & Confused as   well as brands like Uniqlo. “When menswear initially began to emerge as   an industry a lot of the male models were disposable — props to the   women almost — but that has definitely changed. We live in such a   developed and expanding celebrity culture that the fact the models are   breaking their way into the public consciousness, solely for modelling,   is notable.”
 The emergence of these top male models reflects the growth of the   luxury menswear market, which is expected to hit $18 billion in 2016,   according to Minitel. “This guy has evolved and the luxury fashion   houses are marketing much more to him,” said Peres. “To showcase fashion   on fashion models really sharpens the focus and puts the focus 
on the fashion.   This is what they are paid to do; this is why they are paid to do it.   They look great in these clothes, it becomes a stronger statement.”
 The rise of male models has also been driven by the modelling   industry’s shift in attitude towards mass-market brands. “In the past,   model agents used to not think most mass retailers were prestigious   enough or considered ‘fashion.’ One of the biggest [trends] over the   last few years has been mass retailers and top models coming together.   Everyone is doing it, which was definitely fortified by the recession,”   said Kim.
 Stronger aesthetic values have also helped make high visibility   advertising campaigns for the likes of Uniqlo, H&M and Zara some of   the most prestigious and lucrative a model can land. “Contractually,  the  value of a campaign to a model reflects the breadth of its usage  terms.  Its duration, the territories within which it will feature,   exclusivity, if any, be it worldwide, or whether it is limited to the   brands that are perceived as that company’s competitors,” explained Kim.
 By doing these wide-reaching campaigns, which often blanket major   cityscapes, top-tier male models have built far broader public profiles   than ever before — and as their public followings grow, they, in turn,   become more desirable as campaign stars.
 “There are a lot of fans and young boys who look up to these guys and   this relationship translates into stronger sales for the brand and a   more powerful perception of both the fashion brand as well as the   talent,” said Kevin A’Pana, Clement Chabernaud’s agent at IMG Models,   the world’s leading modelling agency, which represents supermodels like   Gisele, 
Joan Smalls and 
Karlie Kloss, and relaunched its men’s division in 2012.
 The growth of social media has also played a significant role in   enabling top male models to build their burgeoning brands. “Social media   has become very important as the top clients look at this and want   those models to shoot for them, it’s a huge PR strategy,” said Lana   Winters Tomczak, owner of VNY Models, which signed Sean O’Pry.
 “I think with social media there has definitely been a shift,” added   Garrett Neff, one of the most in-demand male models working today, who   broke onto the scene as a two-year Calvin Klein exclusive. “We have been   given a little bit of power to put our opinion out there. If you look   at people like 
Cara Delevingne,   Candice Swanepoel, Gisele, and not so far back, Naomi and Kate, people   who have a lot of power and influence; a lot of that has to do with  the  places that they could showcase their opinion. Of course, you use  social  media to build your brand, you have to take the power. Take that   control where you can.”
 Neff has certainly embraced the opportunity, posting steady streams  of  photos and passing thoughts on Facebook and Instagram, and utilising   his access to the gilded and glamorous turning cogs of the fashion   machine to his advantage. “The established guys like myself, we wear the   clothes, we have access to the best stylists and the best   photographers, we learn how to put it together,” Neff continued. “We see   it from a different perspective, because we are everywhere. We are  also  less biased because we don’t have to give advertising credit, so  people  trust us when they see what we are wearing on the street.”
 As a result, “there are more jobs, because you are trusted,” added   Neff. “But also the actual rates of the jobs are going up. Rates are up   50 percent of what they were three years ago. That is my trajectory.  For  people who have been around, who have a following, they command  bigger  rates for sure.” Neff estimated that the top tier of established  male  models earn “between $600,000 and $1.5 million per year.”
 But the scale of the social media audience that top male models have   attracted pales in comparison to that of top female models. On   Instagram, for example, Neff has about 20,000 followers, while Cara   Delevingne has over 4.1 million.
 “There is such a great distance between the most well known male  model  and the most well know female models. Do I think they will ever  exist  on the same plane of popularity as the female models? Sadly, I  don’t,”  said Peres. “I don’t know that the name recognition is going to  come  quickly.”
 Ultimately, Neff agrees, “I still don’t think guys are ever going to be nearly as influential, but it has changed for sure.”
 
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