
Pink Room Design Ideas
14 years ago

We've posted a video featuring Eniko Mihalik, so I thought about celebrating her again. This time she's the face (and body) for the brazilian label Bo.Bo substituting Alessandra Ambrósio. Eniko is fabulous, chic and cat-womanish, as usually :)
Well done, gal!
Check out the full campaign on the label's website!
pic via fashionising
info via Bo.Bo




Swoon + Cat Solen from Levi's Film Workshop on Vimeo.










Zhang Jingna is one of my favourite young photographers. She is in her twenties and has Harper's Bazaar, Elle Singapore, L'Officiel Singapore and companies as Mont Blanc, Mercedes Benz, Lancome and Sony already on the pages of her portfolio. Her shoots are romantic and mysterious, composed with respect to exceptional harmony. She's currently living in LA and I'm pretty sure we'll see her editorials in other major magazines in the future!

If we talk about fashion illustration, we must mention Ruben Toledo. His work is so balanced and so forward-thinking that we cannot ignore him; we simply adore him! Ruben was born in Havana, Cuba in 1961 and is at once a painter, sculptor, illustrator, fashion chronicler and critic, and surrealist. He has also created witty and incisive illustrations for the top fashion magazines and journals from around the world, among them The New Yorker, Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar, Town & Country, Paper, Visionaire, Interview and The New York Times. Additionally, he is the illustrator of Nordstrom’s national designer ad campaign. Toledo’s work has been on exhibit throughout the world, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. Enjoy the works, and smile, as the world is colourful and funny.
cortesy of Trendhunter.com We hate depressive fashion and depressive, negative look. We always ask our models either in fashion shows or at shootings to laugh and radiance. Natalia Grosner is a Toronto-based art director, illustrator and print artist who creates works that are undeniably beautiful. Even though these featured drawings look majorly depressed, they are still too cute to ignore. By combining watercolor with screen-printing, Grosner creates prints that are each unique and interesting, with subtle differences throughout the series. This is what makes these illustrations so special and it is also the reason why they stand out so vividly.

