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Vogue Magazine
At Lilith Fair, Impeccable ’90s Style
A new documentary about Lilith Fair, the all-female music festival founded by the Canadian musician Sarah McLachlan in 1997, has been announced, (partly inspired by this oral history that ran in Vanity Fair in 2019 which you should definitely read). When the story broke early this month it was huge news for fans of female singer-songwriters everywhere and older millennials, like me, who came of age during this incredible time.
Why You Should Take Collagen For Healthier Hair, According To A Biochemist
The conversation around collagen typically focuses on its benefits for the skin on the face, but some dermatologists are keen to highlight that the scalp—and therefore the health of your hair—can also reap rewards from collagen supplements. Sanja Zivanovic, biomedical doctor and founder of ingestible brand Skin Molecule...
Vogue’s Guide to Charleston, South Carolina: Where to Stay, Eat, and Shop
Charleston, South Carolina is a treat for the senses. From the balmy breeze blowing through the old oak trees and swaying the Spanish moss, to the cobblestone streets and the architecture of historic homes—plus, of course, the unparalleled food scene—this Lowcountry hotspot will always delight. Best of all, Charleston exudes the charm and community feel of a small town, with much more to offer than first meets the eye.
Why The Row Loafers Will Always Be Classic
Products are independently selected by our editors. We may earn an affiliate commission from links. Thanks to their “back to school” associations, loafers were once considered a winter shoe that you revisited in September, when knitwear comes out of hibernation. However, in recent years they have become a year-round classic, that look just as good with a white sundress or pair of shorts. The spring 2024 collections were awash with loafers, including creative director Sabato de Sarno’s debut at Gucci which had 25 platformed loafers in the line-up.
Actually, J.D. Vance, Kamala Harris Does Have Children—But That Shouldn’t Matter
It’s not exactly news when a conservative white man takes below-the-belt shots at a liberal woman of color (in fact, I think they just call that “Fox News’s afternoon programming block”), but recently resurfaced comments that Republican vice presidential candidate J.D. Vance made in 2021, referring to the Democratic Party as being run by “a bunch of childless cat ladies who are miserable at their own lives,” still manage to feel beyond the pale. (Though he does not mention Vice President Kamala Harris—now the increasingly likely Democratic presidential nominee—by name, it’s no secret that she has no biological children.)
Chloë Sevigny Can Even Make Ballet Flats An Unexpected Shoe Choice
Leave it to Chloë Sevigny to make such a classic shoe look totally unexpected. Since April of this year, the actor has worn her new favorite shoe no less than 10 times (that the paparazzi caught, at least). The utilitarian footwear in question is like a sneaker-ballerina hybrid, featuring the rubber, GORPy tread of a hiking shoe, the silhouette of a feminine flat, and laces that tie around the ankle like pointe shoe ribbons.
Collection
A photograph of the designer and writer Pauline de Rothschild in her bedroom, with its hand-painted chinoiserie panels of flowering plants and trees, was Mary Katrantzou’s starting point for pre-fall. “This season,” she said, “I was really looking at this connection between interiors and exteriors”—hence Rothschild’s “trompe l’oeil conservatoire,” and other dresses depicting ceiling cornices out of an Italian palazzo and formal gardens of the sort seen at Versailles.
What Are You Up To, Ben Affleck?
This past month, Ben Affleck has been spotted entering and departing the same Los Angeles office building—usually impeccably dressed, in some form of a snazzy suit. His mysteriously dapper wardrobe suggests he’s a real man-on-the-go: He’s often carting a piece of luggage or a duffel bag, along with his his customary XXL iced coffee. (He loves his Dunkin Donuts.) The question is: Where exactly is he going in such sleek outfits? What are you up to, Ben?
What’s Going On With Dubai’s Princesses?
On July 18, Shaikha Mahra Mohammed Rashed Al Maktoum posted an announcement to her 875,000 Instagram followers that was addressed to just one. “Dear Husband, As you are occupied with other companions, I hereby declare our divorce. I divorce you, I divorce you, and I Divorce You,” wrote the princess, who is the daughter of Dubai’s ruler, Sheik Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum. “Take care. Your ex-wife.”
It’s Official: Bridgerton Season 4 Will Center on Benedict’s Love Story
Just over a month after Polin finally found their happy ending, Bridgerton has already set its sights on its next leading man—and it’s none other than Luke Thompson’s charming, artistic, pansexual Benedict. Netflix made the announcement with a video which spliced together some of the second eldest...
Justice For Halle Berry’s Catwoman
Have you ever watched 2004’s Catwoman, starring Halle Berry and Sharon Stone? I would totally understand if you haven’t. Having won a variety of Razzie Awards upon release, including Worst Picture and Worst Actress, it’s still touted as one of the worst superhero movies of all time—but I beg to differ. Two decades later, the campy action flick still remains a total guilty pleasure. Only, there’s nothing really guilty about it at all; I’d argue it’s actually an unabashedly fun and stylish piece of cinema. And you can fight me on that.
How to Clean Sneakers: The Definitive 5-Step Guide
There’s no way around it. Your sneakers—no matter how treasured—are bound to get dirty. (Unless you keep them hermetically sealed in a museum-quality display case, or something.) With summer festivals, hikes, and Challengers-inspired tennis (or pickleball) matches all the perfect excuses for stepping out in tennis shoes, you may be wondering how to clean your sneakers. We reached out to London’s ultimate destination of clean sneaks, Jason Markk, for the top tips for keeping your prized footwear bright and shiny long after they’ve left the shoebox.
Mariah Kennedy Cuomo Wore Vera Wang to Marry Tellef Lundevall at Golden Hour in Hyannis Port
Mariah Kennedy Cuomo and Tellef Lundevall’s romance all started with a college visit. The two first crossed paths in 2012 after Tellef developed a close friendship with two of Mariah’s cousins, Kate Kennedy and Amanda Cole, while they were studying together at Brown University. “The three of them bonded over their shared characteristics,” Mariah explains. “They’re all funny, kind, thoughtful, creative, and game.” Mariah and Tellef first met at her cousin’s apartment on Angell Street in Providence while she was visiting the college as a prospective student during her final year at Deerfield Academy. “That visit cemented that Brown was the right choice for me,” Mariah remembers. “And I also left very interested in Tellef.”
Kamala Harris’s 2024 Presidential Run Just Got an Added Dose of Beyoncé
Political candidates blasting the song of their choice all over the campaign trail—often without checking with the artist first—is nothing new, but current vice president and 2024 presidential hopeful Kamala Harris clearly does things a bit differently. On Tuesday, news surfaced that Beyoncé herself had given Harris permission to use her song “Freedom” throughout her presidential campaign. This isn’t the first time Beyoncé has lent her support (or, at the very least, her music) to prominent Democratic candidates—she famously sang the national anthem at former president Barack Obama’s 2013 inauguration—but the speed with which she must have greenlit Harris’s song choice is genuinely impressive, given that President Joe Biden dropped out of the race on Sunday and Harris walked out to “Freedom” at her first official visit to her campaign headquarters on Monday.
Even Gigi Hadid’s Accessories Have Accessories
Products are independently selected by our editors. We may earn an affiliate commission from links. There’s always something else to buy, isn’t there? This time, your handbag needs a little pick-me-up. A trinket, keyring or charm is just the dopamine rush you and your arm candy need to get through this dismal summer, according to Gigi Hadid, who is still a staunch advocate of String Ting.
My Life in Smocks and Politics: Lynn Yaeger On Elections Past—And What She Wore
It was the summer of 1984. Republican Ronald Reagan was running for reelection against Democrat Walter Mondale, who had picked a woman, Geraldine Ferraro, for his running mate. I was watching the political conventions on my little pink TV—no cable—in my apartment on East Ninth Street that cost $177 a month, wearing a silky flapper frock bought from a vintage store on St. Marks Place. Let the rest of the world flounce to the ballot box in neon colors, miniskirts, big-shoulder overcoats, and Jane Fonda workout clothes: I was dressed for the occasion as if it were 1924, not 1984, with prohibition in full swing and Republican Calvin Coolidge winning the White House. (The waggish journalist and cultural critic H. L. Mencken once observed that electing Coolidge was like a man being presented with a banquet and “stay[ing] his stomach by catching and eating flies.”)
What Getting a Trendy Body Scan Taught Me About Myself
The chamber of an MRI machine is a surreal environment. You’re flat on a slab and fed into a tube. Inside, it’s dark and noisy, intermittent clangs reverberating around your head. I’ve always attributed this chaotic banging to atoms ricocheting, doing quantum stuff, rendering the invisible visible. Bones, organs, blood vessels exposed. Dodgy cell clusters held up to the light for a radiologist’s inspection. MRI is short for “magnetic resonance imaging,” so presumably magnets are involved. I don’t know how. I’m not a scientist. I do know I find getting an MRI an existentially jarring experience. Before the technician loads you into the machine, you are you—an individual with ideas and plans and memories; inside the machine, you are a body. I don’t like MRIs. And yet, on a gray day last December, I find myself at the Prenuvo clinic on 34th Street in New York City, a stone’s throw from the Penn Station train that will soon whisk me upstate, getting scanned head to toe for the hell of it. Because I want to peer into the black box of my body. Because I want to live.
On the Road With Holly Humberstone
The past few years have been nothing short of a whirlwind for Holly Humberstone. On the strength of her breakout EP, 2021’s The Walls Are Way Too Thin, the singer-songwriter was named the Rising Star of 2022 at the Brit Awards—an honor previously bestowed on the likes of Adele and Florence Welch. In a matter of months, Humberstone went from writing songs in her childhood bedroom in rural England to opening for Olivia Rodrigo and Girl in Red on their respective tours.
Facelift Forward: Why Women Are Holding Off On Intervention Until “The Big One”
Because we both know the limits of even the most diligent retinol routine, an actor famous for her kittenish smile and tailored separates levels with me. For a woman on the rise in this business, there are not just parts to consider, but procedures. Her face is her instrument, and...
Is There a Good Way to Break Up With Someone?
Public break-ups have been filling our social media feeds in recent days. Some of these high-profile splits appear amicable, announced via carefully worded joint Instagram statements à la Maya Jama and Stormzy. Others appear… less so. Like the public statement from Sheikha Mahra Bint Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, the daughter of the ruler of Dubai, who posted the following on Instagram: “Dear Husband, As you are occupied with other companions, I hereby declare our divorce. I divorce you, I divorce you, and I Divorce you. Take care. Your ex-wife.”
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Vogue places fashion in the context of culture and the world we live in—how we dress, live and socialize; what we eat, listen to and watch; who leads and inspires us. Vogue immerses itself in fashion, always leading readers to what will happen next. Thought-provoking, relevant and always influential, Vogue defines the culture of fashion.
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