“I was not the first person to photograph Kate Moss, but maybe the second,” says Arthur Elgort, the legendary, 76-year-old New York photographer who’s known for bringing fashion out of the studio and into the real world. “I never took a bad picture of her — I couldn’t. Christy Turlington and Kate Moss, I would say they’re the best models that I’ve worked with.” Both women appear in a new exhibition of his work, which opens at Photo London this week.
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The Ultimate Celebrity Hairstylist Has a New Book
“Hair by Sam McKnight” is a retrospective centered on the respected British stylist, who has been a fixture on fashion shoots and the show circuit for 40 years. He was the man who gave Agyness Deyn her crop; slicked back Princess Diana’s hair; styled Madonna’s platinum curls for the cover of Bedtime Stories; and created a flame-red mop that transformed Tilda Swinton into David Bowie. He’s worked with most of fashion’s big names, decade after decade — including, most consistently, Kate Moss, Patrick Demarchelier, and Karl Lagerfeld.
Read MoreSee Vintage Fashion Illustrations in a New London Exhibit
“A lot of people think that fashion illustration is something that died circa 1930, when photography came in — but that’s absolutely not true,” says Connie Gray, curator of “Drawing on Style,” an exhibition running during this London Fashion Week. “They ran very much hand-in-hand up until the 1960s and 1970s, and they really complemented each other on the page. Very often there would be a mixture of photography and illustration within the same fashion story.”
Read MoreA Swinging ’60s Look at London Style
Donovan, who died in 1996, was one of the significant image-makers who produced the famous London look of the 1960s. “It’s a very British thing: the Union Jack, Twiggy,” says Muir. But, as the new show demonstrates, there was more to Donovan than his renowned women’s-fashion shoots.
Read MoreA Beatles Photographer Captures Street Style in 1970s London
“Al just struck up a rapport with people,” says Martin Barnes, senior curator at the V&A Museum, of the photographer Al Vandenberg, whose new book, On a Good Day, depicts London street life in the 1970s and 1980s.
Read MoreThe History of Modern Underwear in 10 Objects
“I think we underestimate our underwear, and the impact it has on wider patterns of fashion, society and design,” says Susanna Cordner, assistant curator of Undressed: A Brief History of Underwear at London’s V&A Museum.
Read MoreMeet Fashion’s New Favorite Erotic Model
On a Monday morning in Stoke Newington, London, the model Tessa Kuragi arrives for our brunch wearing a leather harness. In fact, it’s the “Tessa Harness” by Tamzin Lillywhite, named after her, and it snakes across her stomach, up her breastbone, and around her throat. She’s wearing it over a black turtleneck sweater; she has dozens of freckles, velvety red-wine lipstick, and an immaculate blunt bob. At first glance, I think of both Louise Brooks and Wednesday Addams.
Read MoreA New Exhibit Shows Every Side of Audrey Hepburn
London’s new Audrey Hepburn exhibition has a satisfying symmetry. It opens with snapshots from her childhood in the Nazi-occupied Netherlands, when she gave ballet recitals to raise money for the Resistance — and it closes with a poignant image of her 50 years later, striking a dance pose in Steven Meisel’s studio, in what was to be the last major photo shoot of her life.
Read MorePeople Have Been Obsessed With Shoes for Centuries
Shoe fetishists rejoice: London’s V&A Museum has finally turned its attention to one of the world’s most enduring obsessions. "Shoes: Pleasure and Pain" is the exhibition opening Saturday, which makes use of the V&A’s enormous fashion archive and showcases 250 pairs of shoes, spanning 2,000 years and 20 countries.
Read MorePhilip Treacy Says Blame the Australians for Fascinators
"A fascinator sounds like a sex toy — it doesn’t really sound like a hat."
Read More4 People Remember Alexander McQueen’s 1996 Dante Show
On March 1, 1996, almost two decades ago, Alexander McQueen presented the Dante collection at the dilapidated Christ Church in East London. The show was dedicated to his close friend Isabella Blow; models walked a crucifix-shaped runway to a soundtrack of organ music and gunfire.
Read MoreWhat It Was Like to Be Backstage at Alexander McQueen’s First Shows
Back in the early 1990s, before there was a Savage Beauty show or friendship with Kate Moss, Alexander “Lee” McQueen was a young fashion graduate, living in a squat and producing fashion collections on a shoestring. Back in those early days, his world was full of friends and collaborators from Central Saint Martins — including Gary Wallis, who was just starting out as a photographer.
Read MoreLondon’s Alexander McQueen Show Is Bigger and Better Than Ever
In May 2011, only a year after the suicide of Alexander McQueen, "Savage Beauty" opened at the Metropolitan Museum of Art: a sweeping retrospective of the designer’s work that explored everything from his 1992 postgraduate collection to his final runway show.
Read MoreBehind the Scenes at an Iconic McQueen Show
In 2007, the photographer Nick Waplington was approached by Lee Alexander McQueen to collaborate on a photography book. McQueen’s idea was to document his working process, following one collection from its conception to the final show. He went to Waplington, he said, because he liked his “dirty, messy style.”
Read MoreA Lifelong Stylist on Her Inspirations, Vogue, and Taking Risks
In her 2012 memoir, Grace Coddington wrote about an assistant she had at British Vogue in the 1980s, who was prone to forgetting phone numbers and getting lost.
Read MoreHow Do You Feel About Your Teenage Style?
Look back at old photos from disposable cameras now, and you'll find they're endearingly unpolished. When someone took a group shot at a party, you didn’t know how you looked until the prints came back — and, more often than not, you'd be captured in the middle of an unflattering blink or sneeze.
Read MoreA Look Back at a Vogue Legend’s Bold Photographs
This weekend, the V&A Museum launches its latest large-scale fashion exhibition — a retrospective of the work of the legendary Vogue photographer Horst P. Horst.
Read MoreThe Photographer Who Captures Youth Subcultures
The acclaimed British photographer Ewen Spencer is perhaps best known for capturing the gritty nightlife of London — but that doesn’t mean he actually wants to live there. “London is quite unforgiving,” he says as we drive through the small seaside town of Brighton, where he’s been living for over a decade. “I’ve had a lot of attempted muggings.”
Read MoreMartin Parr, the Unorthodox Fashion Photographer, Releases a New Book
Martin Parr, the renowned British photographer and president of Magnum Photos, is wearing his only piece of designer clothing when we meet: a Paul Smith sweater. “It was in the sale. I would never pay full price!” he tells the Cut. “That jumper is the only thing I’ve ever bought consciously that I knew the label of — as opposed to walking into a shop because it’s next to the bank.”
Read MoreMeet Jane Shepherdson, the Woman Behind Whistles’ Cult Following
This week, when Whistles arrives in New York, it will be the cult London brand’s first physical presence in the U.S. Whistles is the non-designer label that hangs out with designer fashion. In February, it broke through onto London Fashion Week’s fiercely guarded official schedule despite technically being a mid-market, high-street store. In London, it would be hard to find a fashion editor who doesn’t have Whistles in her wardrobe.
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