Vogue Italia September 2014 by Steven Meisel

... feels like it would have been the perfect chance to celebrate some of the models that, for a time, really shaped the magazine.

in that case the models shouldn't have been just Meisel's favs... I don't think anyone would refuse working with him if he asked... he is basically everything... the photographer, cast director, editor (sorry Franca but let's face it)...
 
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Logistics play a big role in things like these. As much as I'm sure Meisel's input is important it would definitely also be about who is available, whose schedule works with this and who feels right for the cover. Even though there are probably people they didn't go with due to preference, I'm sure there were some who just weren't available due to any of the normal things that could stand in the way of someone being able to appear in a story.

I think their selection was really great considering the amount of work it must have taken to get all these women into a sitting. Major kudos to whomever handled the production on this because they did a great job pulling it all together.
 
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OMG. I knew there would be a lot about casting, but 15pages .....
And nobody is surprised Kristen McK isn't there ? Yet, she had some iconic covers.

Linda isn't what she used to be. Too much scalp actions on her.
Edie C. is really growing on me (as is Lily Boukobza). Now that I see her near Karen, their "career" look similar. Edgy girls (let's be honest Karen when she started wasn't the "model material". Even Gianni didn't want her to walk his shows - he only casted her because of Donatella's crush on her)...

and indeed it must be a pain in the a## to cast all these girls. and please all their needs.


I've noticed people really like group shots here. And the supermodels come-back is on for like 5yrs now... Even more. Isn't it time to put an end to this ? I always wonder why some made it back, and some not (where is Yasmin G ? Natalia Semanova ?????)
 
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^Agree on Linda... she just looks very "done"... Miss Kristen McK as well.

I love that Rianne van Rompaey is on the cover, she's really beautiful!

But mostly elise crombez!!!!!!!!!!! brings back so many memories!! To me she's better than some of the "gracefully" aging beauties featured here.

also... just out annoyance: Naomi Campbell... ugh please feature here everywhere.
 
Linda isn't what she used to be. Too much scalp actions on her.
Edie C. is really growing on me (as is Lily Boukobza). Now that I see her near Karen, their "career" look similar. Edgy girls (let's be honest Karen when she started wasn't the "model material". Even Gianni didn't want her to walk his shows - he only casted her because of Donatella's crush on her)...

a

I think that was Stella Tennant... I believe Karen made it big thanks to Lagerfeld who cast her for Chanel... I don't dislike Eddie either... she is definitely over-hyped but that's ok in the fashion world...
 
to be honest, I was also expecting Eva Herzigova on this cover... Meisel worked with her a bit recently... she even graced the cover once... and in the 90ies she did some great editorial work (not with Meisel but I guess that doesn't count)...

Not having Kristen is super bizarre... I hope they haven't fell out bcos I love when they work together...
 
Kristen's absence is very strange indeed. She hasn't really done any work this year so perhaps she's just taking a serious break?

I'm also a little surprised Anna Jagodzinska wasn't included. She was definitely a Meisel favorite for a little while. I guess they wanted a mix of his muses and girls of the moment as opposed to just using his favorites.
 
Seriously bummed, Kristen McMenamy, isn't anywhere to be found. I wasn't expecting to see Yasmeen but still a bit disappointed she's not here either.
 
Wow. Wow. WOW! I am so overwhelmed by this cover! This is actually so AMAZING!!! Yes, there are DEFINITELY certain models that should have been featured in this, but nevertheless, it is so nice to see a lot of my old favourites, with this issue definitely having that nostalgic element. :heart::heart::heart:
I am VERY VERY MUCH looking forward to purchasing this when I go to Europe this September!!!!!! So glad it's this issue, the timing couldn't be more perfect!!!!!!!! :buzz::clap::bounce::wub::crush:

Does anyone know when this issue is coming out in Rome or Paris? :flower:
 
this cover is testament to just how keen the eye of a career model scout is. to imagine that all these women were once not in front of steven meisel's camera, or any other renowned fashion photag's, and were not as fully formed as they are now is astounding; they make it look easy.

best cover of the year
 
Fifty Years of Style. And a cover with fifty women. One way, our way, to celebrate a unique milestone, to establish a full stop that opens the way with conscious positivity to an equally durable future. Because, to paraphrase Wayne W. Dyer, the aim is not to be better than anyone else, but to be better than we are. Fifty years: a milestone that is nevertheless important in itself, and which becomes a point of reference to reread the fashion and fads of a half of a century, of which “Vogue Italia” has been as much spokesperson as creator.


A re-reading made through a selection of the many style icons who have appeared in the magazine in half a century, told through the extraordinary power of exclusive interviews and, above all, by the images of those masters of photography who have worked with us these past fifty years, most of whom have become icons in their own right. Fifty years in which the evolution of the world has seen styles and fashions change, sometimes arise and disappear, sometimes develop and flourish to become History. Fifty years in which the roles of women (and, of course, and often consequentially, those of men) have changed, evolved, and in most cases, globalised, following in parallel the unstoppable development of society.


Similarly, the aesthetic sense underlying every fashion has also been able to expand, adapt, modify, often becoming one of the protagonists of change itself. Just think of the hippie look or the look typifying the rebels of post French May 1968; the Nude Look at the end of the 1960s or the one – almost diametrically the opposite – of businesswomen of the 1980s; of the conceptual Minimalism of 1990s icons and the metropolitan look embodied by rock/riot/grunge girls. These examples serve to understand how aesthetics has helped to consolidate new, previously unimaginable positions as appropriate uniform for a desired assertion. Fifty years in which, in addition, Italian fashion has created new specifications and imposed them all over the world, in which it has influenced the way we look at the Ars vestimentaria and has itself become THE fashion par excellence. And while becoming at the same time the standard-bearer of a unique aesthetic sense, which finds its perpetual lifeblood in the DNA of our country, immersed in an eternal beauty, sometimes misunderstood, but certainly unique.


Fifty years recorded and often anticipated by our magazine that has a Sense of Style in its very DNA, and which tells its story mainly through those images that for the most part have been, and are, milestones in our creative imagination. Since 1964 when the “Novità” magazine, founded two years earlier, was transformed into “Vogue & Novità” and then in “Vogue Italia”, the importance of Italian fashion in the world has increased tenfold, has been divided, diluted and reforged, making the game of style the source of energy for its perpetual motion. It has been a difficult journey in terms of what has happened, but also seductive because endless, dotted with awards, experiments and even eccentric and forward-looking choices, crowded with iconic brands and designers that are part of History, and which over time have been joined by new names who have brought those stimuli inherent in the New in their role as harbingers of a continuous evolution.


It has been a journey in which the magazine’s parallel vocation for internationality, along with the constant, tenacious work of scouting has in a sense anticipated the concept of globalisation. It has marked an evolution that goes hand in hand with that of female beauty which today ranges from classical canons to the most atypical ones. And which has been traversed by the phenomenon of the supermodel: a cult that “Vogue Italia” realised and made global. “The best way to predict the future is to invent it”, wrote the American scientist Alan Kay, and this is certainly the diktat of a world – the fashion world – that is necessarily fluid and constantly in flux; a world that reads and constantly adopts elements from outside itself and appropriates new stimuli and resources. Fashion offers an engaging journey, and is a feature that has deeply affected the aesthetic vision of men and women. It is a timeless journey in which “Vogue Italia” has accompanied us for fifty years, as a sort of privileged guide to attain destinations yet to be discovered.


With this special issue, we wanted to celebrate Fashion and Photography, its essential spokesman; but most of all we wanted to celebrate the women who are the queens of Fashion and those for whom Fashion itself was born and exists. Models, actresses, artists, socialites, royalty, singers... all in their own way with a unique style and hence women-icons, women-symbols. But above all, women. Who here, in an imaginary fashion parade, talk about themselves also how the vision of women has changed, and how their aesthetic evolution/revolution has accompanied the changes in their social position and role.


Since the 1960s, a widespread self-awareness has seen them transform themselves from rarefied partners, almost a supporting cast of actresses in a theatre of life run (apparently) by men, to undisputed protagonists, solid and aware of an expanding society. Women who remain linked to a necessary femininity which some carry as their banner. Women proud of their style, who adapt the proposals of fashion to their own personalities. Women who make Style into an element that strengthens their status and speaks of their uniqueness. Women. Or rather, the women of “Vogue Italia”. F.S. (Text gathered by Carlo Ducci)

Top of page, from left. Naomi Campbell: minidress in embroidered silk cady, Versace. Carolyn Murphy: dress in brocade with embroidery and appliqué, Dolce & Gabbana. Raquel Zimmermann: bustier in velvet with contrast inserts and long skirt with organza overlay, Giorgio Armani. Christy Turlington Burns: dress in printed jersey with laminated leather detailing, Prada. Amber Valletta: coat in wool crêpe with asymmetrical fastening, Gucci. Center of page, from left. Linda Evangelista: dress in quilted silk, Dior. Karen Elson: dress in crêpe with inlays, Valentino. Natalia Vodianova: dress in brodé brocade with bodice in PVC, Miu Miu. Bottom of page, from left. Edie Campbell: safari jacket in lamée leather, Saint Laurent by Hedi Slimane. Stella Tenant: dress in organza with flower applications, Chanel.

Top of page, from left. Jamie Bochert: tunic in double face wool with color inlays and cuissardes, Marc Jacobs. Vanessa Moody: coat in leather and wool, Chloé. Mariacarla Boscono: embroidered fur in fox and marabou over dress in silk crépon, Givenchy by Riccardo Tisci. Daria Strokous: cape in Persian lamb and marmot over dress in plisée silk, Salvatore Ferragamo. Issa Lish: fur in mink and shorts in Persian lamb, Ermanno Scervino. Center of page, from left. Iselin Steiro: jacket in wool, angora and cashgora mix over skirt in jersey, Max Mara. Liya Kebede: patchwork dress in leather and embroidered silk, boots with laces, Emilio Pucci. Julia Nobis: fur top in wool and mohair over cargo pants in cloth, Missoni. Bottom of page, from left. Meghan Collison: dress in embossed silk and bouclée wool, Alberta Ferretti. Lexi Boling: turtleneck in mohair with wool applications, Calvin Klein Collection.

Top of page, from left. Jessica Stam: coat in Mongolian fur and polo neck sweater in cashmere, Ralph Lauren Collection. Saskia de Brauw: jacket in cotton and acetate with belt and boots in suede, Donna Karan New York. Vanessa Axente: minidress in jersey with stud decoration and muffs in mink, Philipp Plein. Aymeline Valade: dress in brodée duchesse, Rochas. Center of page, from left. Anais Mali: biker coat in leather, Jean Paul Gaultier; sandals, Manolo Blahnik. Coco Rocha: turtleneck in wool and jacquard cashmere and skirt, Giambattista Valli; pantyhose Calzedonia. Fei Fei Sun: high neck in cashmere and skirt in leather, Nina Ricci. Natasha Poly: suit in boiled wool fabric, waistcoat in mink fur and boots in velvet, Tom Ford. Bottom of page, from left. Sasha Pivovarova: sweater in merino wool and boots, Michael Kors. Rianne von Rompaey: polo neck sweater in wool and cashmere with twill weave motif, Trussardi; belt Coach.


Top of page, from left. Ophelie Guillermand: minidress in stretch cady with draped fringes in silk, Stella McCartney. Hilary Rhoda: polo neck in jacquard angora and feather effect skirt with embroidery, Roberto Cavalli. Guinevere Van Seenus: dress in broderie anglaise with ruches and boots in brocade with ribbons in velvet, Alexander McQueen. Karlie Kloss: coat in felt with elastic belt and shoes in patent leather with applications, Marni. Center of page, from left. Julia Stegner: dress in multicolor pleated polyester and belt, Bottega Veneta. Miranda Kerr: mini jumpsuit in metallicized jersey, DVF. Cindy Bruna: dress in arabesque lace with top in brodé chiffon, Blumarine: pumps Manolo Blahnik. Bottom of page, from left. Elise Crombez: dress in dévorée silk velvet and shoes, Etro. Jourdan Dunn: jacket-throw in wool and cashmere over dress in tulle and lace, Burberry Prorsum; sandals Manolo Blahnik. Liu Wen: top and pants in wool, Balenciaga.


Top of page, from left: Isabeli Fontana: embroidered minidress in leather, Balmain. Amanda Murphy: coat in wool and velvet over top in silk with zip, Céline. Joan Smalls: tunic and pants in stretch wool, belt and booties, Alaïa. Candice Huffine: oversize coat in padded silk, Yohji Yamamoto. Anna Ewers: patent leather effect bomber jacket, sweater in cashmere and shorts in silk, Fendi. Center of page, from left. Cameron Russell: jacket in snakeskin with jewel buttons and pumps, DSquared2. Sasha Luss: jacket and skirt in wool with patent leather detailing and polo neck sweater in cotton, Louis Vuitton. Candice Swanepoel: dress in floral jacquard, Lanvin. Bottom of page, from left. Caroline Trentini: dress in striped double cloth, Costume National: pantyhose Calzedonia; pumps Manolo Blahnik. Adriana Lima: sweater and leggings in jacquard wool tricot, Moschino. Hair Guido for Redken. Make-up Pat McGrath for Dolce & Gabbana Make Up. Manicure Jin Soon Choi for JINsoon. Fashion editor Carlyne Cerf de Dudzeele. Set design by Mary Howard. On set Steven Dam for PRODn @ Art+Commerce.




This month’s issue of Vogue Italia will be in the next few days on newsstands and on September 1 in the rest of Italy.
vogue.it
 
This is Epic!! i'm really Happy for Natasha scoring his first VI Cover and also for Stam, Elise,Julia s, and Sasha; some of the choices are really random but overall the cover and the editorial are amazing! can't wait to buy this, definitely something for the history.
 
The cover story for September isn't up on vogue.it website until now! I think they will publish the cover story, ed and video tomorrow morning! :flower:
 
not having gisele basically nullifies the status of who the important models were for the last 15 years, also doutzen as somebody mentioned isn't there, what about Frankie Rayder or Angela Lindvall? kate moss?

this is someones own pet list of models and who knows maybe some models didn't want to be in a group shot
 

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