Gisele Bundchen | Page 932 | the Fashion Spot

Gisele Bundchen

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Chanel Les Beiges making of with Peter Lindbergh :wub:

giselebundchen-online.com
 

Gisele Bündchen: Brazil's top model, mother and career maven
On the eve of the World Cup in Rio, supermodel Gisele Bündchen opens up about soccer, style, career and her best health tips.

It’s the day after the Oscars. We’re standing in a photo studio in Los Angeles, and Gisele Bündchen is almost a film unto herself: a larger-than-life knockout in faded grey jeans and her signature mop of hair. She’s chatting enthusiastically about her one-year-old daughter, who is already showing signs of being “dramatic.”

At 33 years old, Bündchen is celebrating 20 years as a model. It has been a faultless journey for the girl from Horizontina, a small town in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, who dreamed of being a professional volleyball player for the national team. That was before Gisele Caroline Nonnenmacher Bündchen was discovered by an Elite Model Look contest and Alexander McQueen.

You need only glance at the varied shots on her Instagram page (which has over 1.6 million followers) to fully appreciate the breadth of her career. Voted the “world’s most powerful supermodel” by Forbes, Bündchen is the face of brands from Chanel to Pantene, has her own lingerie line and is an active philanthropist. She earns roughly US$40 million a year, which, coupled with the success of her husband, Tom Brady, the handsome quarterback of Boston’s New England Patriots, means that at least a few generations of little Bündchen-Bradys (starting with Benjamin Rein, four, and Vivian Lake, one) will likely be quite comfortable.

Now, Bündchen emerges from the changing room in a bikini and steps in front of the camera, striking her poses efficiently, like a well-oiled machine, while watching her reflection in a mirror. She later shoots a quick glance at the monitor and says she loves the photos—particularly the one in which she’s draped in the Brazilian flag. “Viva o Brasil,” she cries. “We’re going to win!”

Are you excited that this year’s World Cup is in Brazil?
“Soccer has always been a huge part of the culture of Brazil. People here are all geared up!”

Are you going to attend the matches?
“Well, I would like to score a goal myself. [Laughs] I’m very proud that I was born in Brazil. I love the spirit of the Brazilian people. There’s something magical about it. There’s a viva—there is joy. There is warmth—a sense of welcome. When I first came to America, I was hugging and kissing everyone and people were shocked. Soccer supporters will come from different parts of the world, and they will experience that side of Brazilian life—all that beauty and energy.”

Are you passionate about sports?
“I’ve been athletic since I was little. I was the captain of my volleyball team. I used to jog—even almost naked in winter. I’m Sporty Spice!”

What is your relationship with your body?
“The body is a temple. I enjoy moving. I don’t play much volleyball anymore, but I ride horses, surf and play beach tennis. I play wherever I am. Kung fu, boxing, yoga, Pilates.... It makes me feel alive. If I don’t move my body, I don’t feel good.”

How do you feed that body?
“I rarely eat meat, but I’m from the south of Brazil—I was raised on meat. I’m not an extremist, but I need to know where my food comes from. If my food has been injected with antibiotics and a whole lot of other stuff, I [unfortunately] end up eating that as well. I keep chickens at home.”

Where does that awareness come from?
“My grandparents were farmers. I used to watch my grandmother milk cows. It was amazing. That’s the biggest gift my parents ever gave me and my five sisters. I remember they used to swap produce with neighbours. There was a wonderful sense of community. That’s why I shop at farmers’ markets. There are co-operatives in Boston where you pay monthly and get what’s in season. Sometimes it’s zucchini for months at a time!”

Are you trying to pass that awareness on to your children?
“We plant a lot of vegetables and fruit together. They understand the cycle of the seasons and why there are no strawberries in winter. Our health depends on the health of our planet. If we pollute our waters, kill our trees and destroy our oceans, the earth will recycle itself and chuck us out.”

How do you deal with juggling your family and career?
“It’s a constant balance. Sometimes when I go to bed, I’m happy that I did a good job that day. And sometimes, I wish I’d done things differently. Now, it’s getting harder for me to travel for my job. I have a son whom I take to school, and I come back quickly to see my baby. I never feel 100-percent complete. I just want to stay at home now. Luckily, I’m able to choose more because I have been doing this job for 20 years."

How do you keep your enthusiasm after so long?
“I come from a small town with only 10,000 people. When I started modelling, I thought this was a unique opportunity. I feel the same way today. There are lots of sacrifices, but it is a blessing to be able to do this job.”

Why do you think your career has lasted?
“People trust me when they book me for a job. The minimum I give them is 100 percent. I’ve never been late for a job, I respect people and I want to be at my best every time: to show up and deliver. When I lose that, I’ll stop. I’ve done a million photos in my life, and my excitement for it remains intact.”

What’s on your mind these days?
“I want to learn more about myself. I can be a mom, a wife, a friend, a model, but at the end of the day, the most important relationship I have is with myself. I have to live with myself for the rest of my life!”

How do you see the future?
“I’m so excited about the future, but I’m a person who really focuses on the present. Tomorrow is another day. I no longer worry about age.... Every situation is a special moment. Look, I’m really here, with you! It’s an exceptional moment that may never happen again!”
ellecanada.com/
 
La Parisienne June 2014





La Parisienne 06/2014 Digital Edition
 
Elle Portugal July 2014



VIVA BRASIL (Reprint from Elle Italia May 2014 & Elle España June 2014 + 3 new pictures :clap: )
Photographer: Matt Jones
Stylist: Ines Néspoli
Hair: Danilo
Make-up: Brigitte Reis Andersen
Model: Gisele Bündchen



Elle Portugal 07/2014 Digital Edition
 
10401778_1431557493773444_336502342_n.jpg

instagram.com/giseleofficial
 
Elle Germany,Japan,Portugal,Russia

Facebook.com/ellegermany
Facebook.com/ellejapan
Facebook.com/elleportugal
Facebook.com/ellerussia
 
Elle France June 13, 2014



L’AMOUR FOOT (Reprint from Elle Italia May 2014 & Elle España June 2014 + 4 new pictures :clap: )
Photographer: Matt Jones
Stylist: Ines Néspoli
Hair: Danilo
Make-up: Brigitte Reis Andersen
Model: Gisele Bündchen



Elle France 13.06/2014 Digital Edition
 
Thanks so much for Elle scans !

She's canceled Cannes Lions appearance...

The organizers of the Cannes Lions 2014 has just confirmed that Gisele Bundchen no longer participate in the festival. The reason for the cancellation was not revealed. The model will be replaced by actor Rob Lowe American, who will speak on Tuesday, 17 Among the works of the most prominent are the film actor Lives Without a Paddle, Francis Ford Coppola and the series The West Wing, Brothers & Sisters and Parks and Recreation.

ccsp.com.br
 
Gisele to Give World Cup Trophy to Winner Because She’s Brazilian (& She’s Gisele)

Gisele Bundchen will be giving the World Cup Trophy to the winner because current Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff is unpopular (protests have been raging for over a year), the supermodel’s Brazilian, and...she’s Gisele.

The Boston Globe reports that after spending a whopping $11 billion on the World Cup when “tens of millions of Brazilians are poor,” Rousseff is currently the subject of much ire.

So even though the trophy is usually given to the winners from the head of state of the host country, Brazil needed to find someone a little less, er, controversial.
Enter Bundchen.

The 5’11 bombshell, who is married to NFL quarterback Tom Brady, has been asked by FIFA to hand out the prize instead.

It makes sense because she’s Brazilian, powerful (she earned $42 million last year), and she’s just so pretty.

She’s also a Goodwill Ambassador for the UN Environment Program and is on the board for the Rainforest Alliance, so she’s also a good person. We’re pretty pleased with the choice, and we’re guessing Brazil probably is too.

boston.com
 
Gisele with her family at a park in Boston on Father's Day June 15, 2014

zimbio.com
 
wow. that's an incredibly HUGE honour bestowed upon her. She's replacing the head of state in this situation. like ... wow. effectively, hundreds of millions of people will see Gisele as THE face of Brazil.
 
US Vogue July 1999


Indigo Girls
Photographer: Steven Meisel
Models: Gisele Bundchen, Carmen Kass & Frankie Rayder
Fashion Editor: Paul Cavaco
Hair: Jimmy Paul
Makeup: Diane Kendall





Scanned by kelles
 
15th anniversary of this cover. 20 years as a model, july is her birthday month. Would be awesome if she got the July Vogue cover. :p
 

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