Paul Massey/Shutterstock, All Over Press
Just like before. The cover of the fashion bible Vogue’s September issue has attracted attention.
The original 90s supermodels Christy Turlington, 54, Naomi Campbell, 53, Cindy Crawford, 57, and Linda Evangelista, 58, pose together again in Vogue.
Many of them have continued their successful, international modeling careers since the 90s and have also actively done charity work, among other things. Exceptionally, the same cover image graces the cover of both American and British Vogue at the same time.
The American Vogue cover photo publication has so far received more than 360,000 likes. If the image is not visible, you can view it from here.
It has been photographed Rafael Pavarotti and styled editor-in-chief of British Vogue Edward Enningful. The beauty team for the filming includes, among others Eugene Souleiman, Stéphane Marais, Adam Fleischhauer, Megumi Yamamoto mixed Candice Idehen.
If the video doesn’t appear, you can watch it from here.
In an interview with the cover magazine, the four supermodels look back on the iconic January 1990 cover of British Vogue, which changed their lives and launched their decades-long modeling career. In addition to the four, the fifth model colleague also appeared on the front cover: the German Tatjana Patitz, who passed away in January 2023. The cover photo was shot in New York in the 1990s by a fashion photographer who passed away in 2019 Peter Lindbergh.
If the image is not visible, you can view it from here.
Now in their fifties, Turlington, Campbell, Crawford and Evangelista star in the four-part documentary series The Super Models, which will be released on Apple TV+ on September 20 and produced by the foursome.
If the video doesn’t appear, you can watch it from here.
The cover image has also received criticism, as the photoshop editing of the images has been criticized on social media. Many would have wished that the fashion magazine would not have smoothed over the essence of the supermodels in their fifties, but let their ages show in the pictures. The same was written by Alexandra Shulman, former editor-in-chief of British Vogue, in her perspective for The Daily Mail.
This is how the cover photo publication has been criticized on social media:
– You should have skipped the photoshop treatment. These women are beautiful without it, commented one follower.
– Iconic, but when will we let women grow old, asks another.
– Nice cover, but you could have resorted to a lighter photoshop: they are all stunning without it, wrote a third.
– They don’t even look like themselves, commented another follower.