Cindy and the Supers Return, Protest Rally Fashion and Why Women Can't Take Compliments
Filed under: News
HEY, NO! PUMPS HAVE GOT TO GO!
Did you think that women who protest think about what they wear? It seems they indeed do. On the list of forbidden protest rally fashions: high heels, facial jewelry and anything adorned with a pom pom. We're guessing those famous McQueen stilettos won't get your message of going meat -free taken seriously?
[Guardian]
IT'S A BIRD! IT'S A PLANE...
It's the revival of the original supers! Cindy Crawford tells us why she and her fellow class of nineties supermodels like Naomi Campbell, Christy Turlington and Kate Moss are booking the big campaigns again. Says the talk drink of brunette, "My take on it is to do with the economy. People would rather spend money on the familiar. We are their generation."
[Vogue UK]
OH, THIS OLD THING?
You've probably experienced this or done it yourself. You tell your friend her new Jimmy Choo for H&M shoes are hot and she replies with a ten minute description of her cankles and fat thighs. Psychologist Susan Quilliam tells the Daily Mail: "Most women's knee-jerk reaction to a compliment is to think that the other person is just being nice, or feeling sorry for them."
[Daily Mail]
Did you think that women who protest think about what they wear? It seems they indeed do. On the list of forbidden protest rally fashions: high heels, facial jewelry and anything adorned with a pom pom. We're guessing those famous McQueen stilettos won't get your message of going meat -free taken seriously?
[Guardian]
IT'S A BIRD! IT'S A PLANE...
It's the revival of the original supers! Cindy Crawford tells us why she and her fellow class of nineties supermodels like Naomi Campbell, Christy Turlington and Kate Moss are booking the big campaigns again. Says the talk drink of brunette, "My take on it is to do with the economy. People would rather spend money on the familiar. We are their generation."
[Vogue UK]
OH, THIS OLD THING?
You've probably experienced this or done it yourself. You tell your friend her new Jimmy Choo for H&M shoes are hot and she replies with a ten minute description of her cankles and fat thighs. Psychologist Susan Quilliam tells the Daily Mail: "Most women's knee-jerk reaction to a compliment is to think that the other person is just being nice, or feeling sorry for them."
[Daily Mail]











