Teen Vogue - March 2014

February 6, 2017 | Author: oilivia marin | Category: N/A
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Teen Vogue - March 2014...

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MARCH

beautiful

LEA

YOU

MICHELE

BIG HAIR IS BACK!

“I’ve found a whole new level of strength”

mega lashes • flawless skin • statement nails •

smoke signals

OPENS UP

the truth about e-cigarettes

DENIM SPECIAL! ULTRACOOL IDEAS AT EVERY PRICE

spring fashion HIT LIST YOUR ULTIMATE GUIDE TO

THE SEASON’S BEST BUYS

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march 2014 WorldMags.net p. 140 boot camp

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Contributors Meet model, budding stylist, and writer Harriet Charity Verney, niece of the late Isabella Blow; part-Japanese, part-Belgian model Yumi Lambert; and American Ballet Theatre soloist (and now author) Misty Copeland.

Trending Your feedback on our December/January 2014 issue. Plus, teenvogue.com editorial director Naomi Nevitt answers readers’ questions on Twitter.

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Fashion at work: Solange Franklin Get to know the first assistant to fashion editor Giovanna Battaglia.

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58

50

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TeenVogue.com Shop for the perfect prom dress with galleries of feteworthy frocks, learn all about the must-follow style Instagrammers of Teen Vogue’s Inst@list, and bring runway trends to the real world with inspiration from our Fashion Click.

Masthead

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MARCH 2014

Cover look Get the inside scoop on Teen Vogue’s Lea Michele cover shoot with photographer Giampaolo Sgura and stylist Patrick Mackie at a sun-soaked ranch near Santa Clarita, California, and learn how to duplicate her dreamy look.

Letter from the editor Puff piece.

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Jane’s style file: Old school Rewind! Teen Vogue senior fashion news director Jane Keltner de Valle teams up with DJ Harley VieraNewton to bring spring’s ninetiesinspired looks into the here and now. continued ➤ 34 TEENVOGUE.COM

SCOTT TRINDLE

FASHION

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continued

➤ 30

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My world: Sarah Hyland From top hangout spots to James Franco’s book, the Modern Family and Vampire Academy actress reveals some of her favorite things.

people watching

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Best Western Giddyap! Chanelclad A-listers took over Dallas for a wild Texas-style shindig celebrating the label’s rollicking pre-fall collection.

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Aero dynamic Mini mogul Bethany Mota (aka YouTube sensation Macbarbie07) broadcasts her comfy, cute style in a new collection with Aéropostale. In addition to showcasing looks from the line, the 18-year-old Internet star shares how she gets by with a little help from her 4 million–plus fans.

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Shabby chic These frayed fashion plates are on a tear in distressed-but-not-a-mess denim.

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Instant gratification Meet (and follow) Teen Vogue’s Inst@list—an exclusive collective of our favorite emerging style influencers on Instagram. Here, a few of the picture-perfect panel members tell us about themselves.

teen vogue view

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Spring forward From trends to know to major new accessories, we’ve got your cheat sheet for the best fashion finds. Meet the face continued ➤ 38

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GIAMPAOLO SGURA

FASHION

p. 132 spring awakening

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p. 160 big love

BEAUTY & HEALTH

➤ 34

beauty & health

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Beauty trend report: Master class From off-dutymodel hair to perfect lashes, discover the backstage tips you need to know now. Learn about the surprising lipstick shade that works on everyone, choose the floral fragrance that fits your mood, nail down the latest in mani art, and more.

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Face-off: Brit girls Model BFFs Georgia May Jagger and Suki Waterhouse go head-to-head over the best in beauty.

fashion & features

of the season, DIY your own Chanelinspired bag, and get a leg up in the short du jour.

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Comic trip It Brit actress Jazzy de Lisser shows her funny side in the new Rodnik x Peanuts mash-up.

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Denim patrol: Tough love Channel your inner rock star in a decked-out denim jacket.

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MARCH 2014

people are talking about

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Aussie in wonderland Maia Mitchell steals the spotlight in ABC Family’s hit show The Fosters.

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Spring break books Vacation’s best accessory: the perfect book, of course. Relax poolside with four of our favorite new novels.

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In the game Be a fashion all-star in the season’s glammed-up take on sportswear.

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Spring awakening Broadway, Glee, and everything in between—Jonathan Groff has been by Lea Michele’s side through it all. The continued ➤ 44 TEENVOGUE.COM

JASON KIBBLER

continued

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march 2014 WorldMags.net continued ➤ 38

star opens up to her best friend about how she stays strong and happy.

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Amazing grace Making waves in the ballet world is nothing new for Misty Copeland, who fought racism and body shaming on her journey to become the first black soloist in 20 years at the prestigious American Ballet Theatre. In this excerpt from her

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MARCH 2014

and plays entirely by her own eccentric rules.

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Electric youth Some believe vaping is a safer alternative to smoking cigarettes, but e-cigs still contain nicotine, plus metals like tin, lead, and nickel. Here’s everything you need to know about e-cigarettes.

Boot camp Get to work! Utility meets style in the season’s military-inspired threads.

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memoir, Life in Motion, she tells all.

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Fashion in the family: Modern English The late fashion icon Isabella Blow’s rabble-rousing niece, Harriet Charity Verney, is equal parts town and country—

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Big love Backstage pro James Pecis takes hair to dramatic new heights.

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In this issue

last look

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Snapshot: Coco Brooks The New York City–bred equestrienne talks style and moving to the English countryside. TEENVOGUE.COM

WILL DAVIDSON

FEATURES

p. 148 amazing grace

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com

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EDITOR: NAOMI NEVITT

@LUSTTFOR

LIFE

@THEF ASHIO N

CITIZEN

@TEENVOGUE

Hair, makeup, and outfit inspiration is at your fingertips with our new Inst@list, Teen Vogue’s must-follow index of the best and brightest style Instagrammers across the country. See which up-andcoming Internet It girls made the cut at teenvogue.com/instalist, and be sure to follow @teenvogue to see our editors’ favorite pics.

Olympia Contopidis

PROM

PARTY TIME! Perfect prom dresses, right this way!

Visit teenvogue.com/prom to shop our galleries of feteworthy frocks, from gorgeous gowns to short-and-sweet minis made for the dance floor. 48

MARCH 2014

Willabelle Ong

Vickie Laliotis

FASHION

REAL STYLE NOW

Love keeping up with the runway but don’t know how to translate the looks into real life? See how cool readers from all over the world decode the season’s top fashion and beauty trends now at fashionclick.teen vogue.com, and apply today to have your blog be part of the Click!

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Clockwise from left: JASON KIBBLER; courtesy of @lusttforlife; courtesy of @thefashioncitizen; ANDREW TARVER/courtesy of adventuresinfashion.ca; courtesy of Willabelle Ong/paledivision.com; courtesy of Olympia Contopidis/olympias-blog.blogspot.com.

INTRODUCING THE TEEN VOGUE INST@LIST!

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WorldMags.net Editor in Chief

AMY ASTLEY

Creative Director Marie Suter Fashion Director Gloria Baume Managing Editor Leigh Ann Boutwell Senior Fashion News Director Jane Keltner de Valle

FASHION Bookings Director Lara Bonomo Accessories Director Sheena Smith Senior Fashion Market Editor/Special Projects Editor Mary Kate Steinmiller Senior Associate Accessories Editor Gisella Lemos Assistant Fashion Market Editor Sarah E. Pillai Accessories Market Assistant Samantha Greenspan Fashion Assistant Sarah Brody Accessories Assistant Kirby Marzec FASHION FEATURES Assistant Fashion News Editor Victoria Lewis Fashion News Assistant Media Brecher BEAUTY AND HEALTH Beauty and Health Director Elaine Welteroth Assistant Beauty Editor Phillip Picardi FEATURES Style Features Director Andrew Bevan Senior Entertainment Editor Dana Mathews Features Editor Jessica Pels Editorial Assistant Liana Weston ART Art Director Sarah Waiser Designer Erin Hover Art Assistant Hannah Chung PHOTO Photo Director Rhianna Rule Associate Photo Editor Jacqueline Ladner Assistant Photo Editor Mary Fletcher PRODUCTION Production Director Nicole Stuart Research Chief Marni Okun Copy Chief Joanna Citrinbaum Assistant to the Editor in Chief Alexandra Thurmond Assistant to the Managing Editor Avery Spofford TEENVOGUE.COM Editorial Director Naomi Nevitt Social Media Manager Drew Elovitz Associate Editor, Features Casey Lewis Associate Editor, Fashion Features Julia Rubin Associate Producer Joshua Bartky Assistant Editor, Beauty Eden Univer Editorial Assistants Marianne Dabir, Claire Knebl Senior Public Relations Director Erin Kaplan West Coast Editor Lisa Love Paris Editor Fiona DaRin

CONTRIBUTORS Havana Laffitte, Camila Lopez de Carrizosa, Bee Shaffer Artistic Director

ANNA WINTOUR For subscription inquiries, please write to TEEN VOGUE, P.O. Box 37730, Boone, IA 50037-0730, or [email protected], visit teenvogue.com, or call (800) 274-0084. For reprints, please e-mail [email protected] or call (717) 505-9701, ext. 101. For reuse permissions, please e-mail [email protected] or call (800) 897-8666. Address all correspondence to TEEN VOGUE, 4 Times Square, 9th Floor, New York, NY 10036, or call (212) 286-2860.

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WorldMags.net JASON WAGENHEIM Vice President and Publisher

Associate Publisher Advertising Director Senior Executive Director, Brand Development Senior Director, Finance and Business Operations Executive Director, Creative Services

Toria Garrett Ezra Sean Alvarez Stacy Greco Mark Okean Lindsay Leaf

ADVERTISING Andres Gutierrez Jee Ahn Judy Sage Jennifer Jacques Siegert Tova Heiney Jill Carey Brooke Delott Amirah Heath

Executive Development Director, Beauty Executive Development Director, Fashion and Retail Executive Director, Beauty and Luxury Account Director Fashion Account Director Associate Business Director Associate Business Manager, teenvogue.com Executive Assistant to the Vice President and Publisher

SALES ASSISTANTS

Jessica Heinmiller, Sue Warda, Natalie Mahdavi, Ashley Shaffer

MARKETING AND PROMOTION Gillian Avertick Catherine Makk Angelique Reed Cieja Springer Colleen O’Connor Lauren Ruddy Sheena Meekins Melissa Bizzak Kiera Lewis Kelly Mytrowitz Melanie Rivera Baileigh Johnson

Creative Director, Advertising Director, Retail and Consumer Insights Associate Beauty Merchandising Director Associate Retail Merchandising Director Senior Manager, Digital and Community Development Senior Marketing Manager Fashion Merchandising Manager Merchandising Manager Designer Special Events Manager Associate Brand Development Manager Promotion Assistant

BRANCH OFFICES

Northwest Director Monica Fitzsimmons (415) 955-8291; [email protected] Midwest Director Lauer Bâby (312) 649-3503; [email protected] Los Angeles Director Lizet Alvarez (323) 965-3744; [email protected] Southwest Manager Milligan Media, LLC (214) 368-2001 Alessandro and Rinaldo Modenese Managers, Italy Via M. Malpighi 4, 20129 Milan; tel.: 39-02-2951-3521; fax: 39-02-204-9209

Published by Condé Nast

Chairman S.I. NEWHOUSE, JR. Chief Executive Officer CHARLES H. TOWNSEND President ROBERT A. SAUERBERG, Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer John W. Bellando President, Condé Nast Media Group and Chief Revenue Officer Louis Cona Chief Administrative Officer Jill Bright Chief Technology Officer Joe Simon EVP, Chief Integration Officer Drew Schutte Managing Director, Real Estate Robert Bennis SVP, Market Research Scott McDonald SVP, Business Development Julie Michalowski SVP, Human Resources JoAnn Murray VP, Corporate Communications Patricia Röckenwagner VP-CN, Licensing John Kulhawik VP, Strategic Sourcing Tony Turner VP, Digital Platforms Hal Danziger VP, Human Resources Paul E. Wolfe VP, Special Projects Patty Newburger VP, Corporate Communications Joseph Libonati

JR.

SVP, Operations and Strategic Sourcing David Orlin SVP, Corporate Controller David B. Chemidlin SVP, Finance Jennifer Graham SVP, Editorial Operations Rick Levine SVP, Digital Technology Nick Rockwell SVP, Editorial Assets and Rights Edward Klaris VP, Manufacturing Gena Kelly VP, Planning and Strategy Shen-Hsin Hung VP, Digital Product Development Chris Jones VP, Human Resources Nicole Zussman VP, Digital Operations and Monetization

Christopher Guenther

Condé Nast Media Group

VP, Corporate Partnerships Josh Stinchcomb VP, Insights and Brand Strategy Daniella Wells VP, Marketing Solutions Padraig Connolly VP, Finance Judy Safir

Condé Nast Consumer Marketing Monica Ray Gary Foodim Matthew Hoffmeyer Gina Simmons Christopher Reynolds

Executive Vice President Vice President, Consumer Marketing Vice President, Planning and Operations Vice President, Consumer Marketing Promotion Vice President, Marketing Analytics

Condé Nast Entertainment President Dawn Ostroff EVP, Chief Operating Officer Sahar Elhabashi EVP, Motion Pictures Jeremy Steckler EVP, Programming and Content Strategy, Digital Channels EVP, Chief Digital Officer Fred Santarpia Michael Klein VP, Digital Video Operations Larry Baach SVP, Business Development and Strategy Whitney Howard VP, Revenue Operations Jason Baird VP, Technology Marvin Li VP, Production Jed Weintrob VP, Marketing Mei Lee VP, Scripted TV Gina Marcheschi VP, Branded Content & Sales Marketing Anissa E. Frey

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Published at 4 Times Square, New York, NY 10036

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Cover Look

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WITH JONATHAN GROFF

Get the inside scoop on Teen Vogue’s cover shoot with Lea Michele.

FLOWER CHILD

see more.

On the cover: Lea wears a Michael Michael Kors shirt,, $100. Mokuba ribbon (worn in hair),, $4 per p yard. y At right: g Burberryy Prorsum dress. Lover bralette,, $135. Dogeared necklace, $54. Lulu Frost charm. Details, see In This Issue.

UNLOCK A SLIDE SHOW OF LEA’S BEST FASHION MOMENTS AND EXTRA INTERVIEW QUOTES WITH OUR INSIDER APP FOR IPHONE, OR VISIT TEENVOGUEINSIDER.COM ON YOUR MOBILE BROWSER.

PHOTOGRAPHER: GIAMPAOLO SGURA. FASHION EDITOR: PATRICK MACKIE. 58

MARCH 2014

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TEENVOGUE.COM

Clockwise from top left: JON SHOER; GIAMPAOLO SGURA (2).

i

feel like I’m on a mini vacation!” Lea Michele exclaimed when she arrived on the set of her second Teen Vogue cover shoot. The star was in happy spirits at our sun-soaked ranch, located near Santa Clarita, California, and loved the introspective and dreamy photo session with photographer Giampaolo Sgura. In her trailer the powerhouse singer played tracks off her upcoming album, Loudd er, r as the glam squad worked their magic, and she snacked on healthy foods like kale, tofu, and Ezekiel 4:9 bread between takes. Lea’s favorite part of the near-perfect day? Spending it with her best friend, actor Jonathan Groff, who flew in from the San Francisco set of his new HBO show, Looking, to take part in the fun. “We’ve been through so much together,” Lea said. “Having my best friend here was such a treat. I got a little teary-eyed, to be honest!” She paused, adding with a smile, “We met eight years ago [performing in Spring Awakening], g and he’s still by my side.” ➤

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Cover Look

PITCH-PERFECT PAIR

a

GET HER LOOK

From top: L’Oréal Paris True Match Minéral Instant Shine Eraser, $13, Visible Lift CC Eye Concealer, $10, and Telescopic Shocking Extensions Mascara, $10. All, Walgreens.

LEA’S TEEN VOGUE MOMENTS

nyone who’s watched Glee knows that Lea Michele (aka Rachel Berry) loves a bold hair-and-makeup look. But for her Teen Vogue cover, the mood was soft, romantic, and natural. To showcase Lea’s stripped-down beauty, the star’s longtime makeup artist Mélanie Inglessis focused on her skin, massaging her face with moisturizer and then applying luminous foundation and a light touch of concealer. Going sans shadow and eyeliner meant Lea’s voluminous lashes got to take the lead. “Her lashes are longer than the fake sets I carry!” Inglessis shares with a laugh. A quick swipe of mascara— black on top, brown on bottom (to keep it subtle)—and Lea was camera-ready. The hair, it turns out, was more of a collaborative effort. Stylist Ben Skervin blew it out and curled it but asked Lea to put it up herself for a more natural, lived-in look. Taking a cue from spring runways, Skervin topped off the style by decorating her brown strands with flowers and ribbon. But there was one more thing the star needed to do on her own. “She said, ‘I have a personal relationship with my bangs,’ and asked if she could blow-dry them herself,” Skervin says. “She was a pro.” In two minutes they were done, “and they sat exactly where we wanted for the whole day,” Skervin says proudly. “She gets all the credit.” @ mslea ichele: “Me and m my two favorite bo ys :) ”

DECEMBER/JANUARY 2011 FEBRUARY 2007 Lea with her Spring Awakening “We have a really wonderful kind of fame... costars (clockwise from left): [that] comes from being part of something Jonathan B. Wright, John Gallagher, that’s so important.” —Lea, 24, on starring XX Jr., MARCH 2014 and Jonathan Groff in Glee with Cory Monteith

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CORY AND JO NATHAN ON LEA’S IN STAGRAM

Clockwise from top: GIAMPAOLO SGURA; no credit; VINCE BUCCI/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Images; REGAN CAMERON; DAVID BAILEY; courtesy of L’Oréal Paris; LUCAS VISSER; courtesy of L’Oréal Paris.

“I’ve asked Lea the tough stuff because I’m her friend and I can,” Jonathan says of his interview with the star, on page 132. “Her fans will see a side of her that’s more intimate.”

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Letter from the Editor WorldMags.net

“AMAZING GRACE,” PAGE 148

lectronic cigarettes are all over the news here in New York City. Our health-conscious former mayor, Michael Bloomberg, banned them in public spaces, as he has successfully done with regular ciggies. Everything about e-cigs is like the Wild, Wild West: They are unregulated on the federal level—in many states there is no legal age limit to buy them, and there are currently no federal advertising restrictions, meaning makers are free to spend millions marketing them to you. It’s even challenging “ELECTRIC YOUTH,” PAGE 152 to gather basic health facts about e-cigs, as much is simply unknown about their longterm effects. Vaping appears less damaging than smoking because users don’t inhale carbon monoxide or tar. However, since e-smokers are nevertheless ingesting nicotine as well as fine metal particles (tin, lead, and nickel—ugh!), vaping is probably merely the lesser of two evils. Some people argue that e-cigs are helping them to quit the even more toxic traditional cigs, which could be a positive. But if you’re vaping as a “safe” alternative to smoking, be warned that the nicotine dose you’re receiving is serious stuff—and very addictive. Our feature “Electric Youth” lays out all the facts we could gather at press time, and the bottom line is clear to me: Don’t get hooked on nicotine, no matter the delivery system.

“SPRING AWAKENING,” PAGE 132

A WEEK AT WORK

At left: I document my days on Instagram— everything from a swanky beauty gift (yeah, Chanel) to a showroom appointment at Jason Wu (those boots!) to hitting the red carpet with the Biebs (swag!).

FOLLOW AMY! @amytastley on Instagram and Twitter TIN BIEBER’S WITH JB AT THE JUS E IN L.A. BELIEVE PREMIER

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Clockwise from top: WILL DAVIDSON; BELA BORSODI; GIAMPAOLO SGURA; no credit (3).

PUFF PIECE e

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Contributors

WorldMags.net harriet charity verney

editor: ALeXANdrA tHUrMoNd

When your aunt is the late eccentric English fashion icon Isabella Blow, style comes naturally. Take it from Harriet Charity Verney, who spent her childhood playing dress-up in Alexander McQueen and running around backstage at Philip Treacy shows. “Fashion is a confidence booster and a complete game changer—I think that’s pretty amazing,” the It Brit says. For our “Modern English” story, she and Teen Vogue style features director Andrew Bevan combed through hand-me-downs from Isabella’s collection, selecting pieces that match Harriet’s own sense of daring, which was on full display at the shoot. “I was told the horse was ‘a bit of a bucker,’ and I was riding him with no tack wearing a Vivienne Westwood corset and an embroidered floor-length Elizabethan skirt,” she explains. “It was wild!”

4

iSH,” page 15

yumi lambert

“in tHe game,” page 124

misty copeland

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“amazing grace,” page 148

Clockwise from top: NICK DOREY (2); ADAM KATZ SINDING/Le 21ème; GREGORY HARRIS; WILL DAVIDSON; NISIAN HUGHES. Details, see In This Issue.

“mODern engL

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Trending

WorldMags.net YOUR FEEDBACK ON OUR

DEC/JAN 2014 ISSUE

I cannot thank you enough for having Selena Gomez on the cover. She is so down-to-earth and gives her best, most honest advice.

Grimes in “Tiny Dancer,” photographed by Nick Haymes

#READERGRAM @PINKSTERSTYLE

alessandrabieber VIA TEENVOGUE.COM

Sophie Arnold

MUNCIE, INDIANA

It’s cool that Teen Vogue isn’t inspiring you to ‘look hot’ for boys or telling you what’s ‘in’ and ‘out.’ Teen Vogue inspires you to find your own personal style, regardless of what people say or think!

I love Grimes so much. She’s really a role model; she’s fearless, empowering, and encourages people to think differently through her art and music.

ASK AN EDITOR

welcometoplanetearth VIA TEENVOGUE.COM

All your questions, answered by us!

@NeekaEghbali: I want to be editor in chief of my school newsmagazine next year. Any advice on scoring the job of my dreams? Naomi Nevitt: A great leader needs to ask a lot of questions, make clear, firm decisions, and have a vision. Go for it! @PrimadonnaGurls: What’s the first thing you do when you get to the office?

NAOMI’S FAVES

Apple iPhone 5s, starting at $199. Comme des Garçons wallet, $96.

Naomi Nevitt

TEENVOGUE.COM EDITORIAL DIRECTOR

WRITE, POST, TWEET, OR INSTAGRAM!

Check back next month, when Teen Vogue features editor Jessica Pels takes the hot seat! facebook.com/teenvogue

NN: I answer e-mails from @AmyTAstley,

check the trending topics on Twitter, and get to work! @stylestorey: What are your favorite fashion films? NN: I really like the Yves Saint Laurent documentary, but my favorite is Isaac Mizrahi’s Unzipped. @chrstinaaa28: What was the best advice you got as an intern? NN: Always keep in touch with past mentors. You never know where they’ll end up! @EmmaSophJohnson: How would you describe your job in three words? NN: It’s fast, fun, and hard—not going to lie! @upandgogirls: What’s your proudest achievement? NN: My proudest achievement is building a website that inspires girls all over the world to think outside the box!

@teenvogue

[email protected]

@teenvogue

Submissions should include the writer’s name, address, and daytime phone number and be sent by e-mail to [email protected] or by mail to Trending, Teen Vogue magazine, 4 Times Square, New York, NY 10036. Submissions may also be placed by commenting on teenvogue.com, facebook.com/teenvogue, or twitter.com/teenvogue, or by posting on Instagram @teenvogue. Submissions may be edited for length and clarity and may be published or used in any medium. All submissions become the property of Teen Vogue and will not be returned. 74

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Clockwise from top left: GIAMPAOLO SGURA; NICK HAYMES; courtesy of Sophie Arnold; courtesy of Comme des Garçons; maximimages.com/Alamy; no credit; JENNA MARIE WAKANI. Details, see In This Issue.

EDITOR: ALEXANDRA THURMOND

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Fashion at Work

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EDITOR: JANE KELTNER DE VALLE RED HOT

“I started working with Giovanna and now totally understand that if you love somebody and respect them, you want to grow with them,” Solange says. “I feel like I learn from every single shoot.” PHOTOGRAPHED BY ALEXANDER WAGNER.

SOLANGE

franklin

AGE: 28 HOMETOWN: Des JOB: “I’m first

Moines

b

oth of my parents are doctors, and initially I didn’t know that fashion could even be an occupation. I was premed at Mount Holyoke College, and while waiting for lab results I’d be thinking about how to redesign my lab coat and make cool science goggles! My interest in style started with Teen Vogue. I used to get two subscriptions—I’d cut up one to make mood boards and keep the other so I’d have a catalog of every issue. While in college, I scored an internship in the market department there. I commuted back and forth from western Massachusetts to New York City to finish school and intern at the same time! I landed my job with Giovanna through the recommendation of someone I’d worked with while freelancing. When I started, I was her second assistant and then got promoted. Now I help Giovanna with each photo shoot she styles. I handle market and casting, pitch stories, and attend shows. I also coordinate looks at W, where she’s a contributing fashion editor, and at ➤

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WorldMags.net NNA BATTAGLIA WITH BOSS GIOVA

TEENVOGUE.COM

Fashion Editor: Gisella Lemos; location: The Standard, East Village. Inset: no credit. Details, see In This Issue.

assistant to fashion editor Giovanna Battaglia.”

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Fashion at Work

WorldMags.net solangeÕs tips

1. Be positive. Attitude can get you almost as far as talent can. 2. Have other interests. Knowledge of art history, music, and current events is important. 3. Be resourceful. Do your research and ask lots of questions! SOLANGE’S MUST-HAVES

Vogue Japan. On a typical day, IÕll wake up early to check in with people in Europe, then those in New York, and later our contacts in Japan. In the afternoon IÕll go on appointments. Sometimes in the evening IÕll attend an event with Giovanna, and then weÕll have a shoot the next morning and be on set all day. When it comes to styling a project, we start with our memories of the shows we saw during fashion week. We browse the collections online for a theme, whether itÕs a color or a silhouette. WeÕre always inspired by new designers because they keep things fresh and exciting. Once we have a direction, we coordinate receiving the clothing at our office, then start compiling looks and trying them on models. Giovanna is confident in my ability to help compose a beautiful picture. When people work with us, they say weÕre more like collaborators than employee and employer. To me, sheÕs like a big sister! I sometimes travel with her, and once, when we were in Tokyo doing a story for Vogue Japan, Giovanna and I took part in late-night karaoke! (I rapped TLCÕs ÒWaterfalls,Ó and she was superimpressed.) SheÕs someone who never forgets to have fun. ThatÕs what I love about her, and thatÕs the epitome of what fashion is supposed to be: a celebration of style. One day I hope to go on my own as a stylist. The next step is to take on extra responsibility so I can be more like my amazing boss!Ó

WorldMags.net T CHOOSING LOOKS FOR A SHOO

From top: LUCAS VISSER; courtesy of Giovanna Battaglia by Case Scenario; courtesy of Diptyque; LUCAS VISSER; ALEXANDER WAGNER; location: nomadvintage.com. Details, see In This Issue.

From top: Juicy Couture sunglasses, $145. Similar styles at juicycouture .com. Giovanna Battaglia by Case Scenario iPhone cover, $30. yoox.com. Diptyque Do Son Eau de Toilette, $88 for 1.7 oz. nordstrom .com. Stubbs & Wootton shoes, $400. stubbsandwootton.com.

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Jane’s Style File

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ALPHABET CITY

Harley wears a DKNY x Opening Ceremony long-sleeve tee, $145, and shoes, $175. J Brand tank, $265. M. Patmos skirt, $395. Y-3 visor, $95. Nike socks, $22. Details, see In This Issue.

PHOTOGRAPHED BY JASON KIM.

old school

Fashion Editor: Catherine Newell-Hanson; hair, Benoit Moeyaert for Marie Robinson Salon; makeup, Vincent Oquendo using Laura Mercier. Inset: JANETTE BECKMAN/Getty Images.

Rewind! Jane Keltner de Valle teams up with DJ Harley Viera-Newton to bring spring’s ninetiesinspired looks into the here and now.

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’ve always felt a kinship with Alexander Wang over our shared love of nineties hip-hop, which anyone who has attended a show or after-party of his can attest to (his New York store opening featured a live performance by Lauryn Hill— hello!). But when the lights went up at his spring show and models hit the concrete runway in leather dresses laser-cut with his name, which was also branded on athletic-inspired waistbands, I felt as if I’d taken an express train to my youth. Wang’s wink back in time recalled the iconic Calvin Klein campaigns of the era starring Kate Moss and Marky Mark (Mark Wahlberg’s name in his former life as a rapper). And Wang was hardly the only designer feeling nostalgic. From the return of the slip dress to raver style reimagined (please leave the glow sticks at home this time around), ’tis the season to reference the nineties. ➤

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Jane’s Style File

STRINGS ATTACHED

Jane wears a Sportmax dress. Topshop sandals, $90. Harley wears an Elizabeth and James dress, $395. Tom Binns cuff. Topshop sandals, $110. Details, see In This Issue.

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To test-drive spring’s takes on the decade, I ring up one of my favorite girls-about-town, Harley Viera-Newton. In addition to having a sharp eye for clothes, Harley doesn’t take herself too seriously and is a professional remixer (both in terms of dressing and DJing).

TAKE ONE: LOGOMANIA

via DKNY’s graphic tee. When I was growing up in New York City in the nineties, the DKNY billboard on Houston and Broadway was larger-than-life and iconic. Basic rule: Don’t mix or double up on logos. Too much of a good thing is always a bad thing. We decide to keep the palette a clean black and white, save for a strong red lip (one of Harley’s signatures). A slick pony finishes the look. The result: urban cool.

TAKE TWO: SLIP DRESSES

GWYNETH

PARTY MONSTER

Nasty Gal Collection bralette, $80. J Brand dress, $445. Maison Scotch jersey, $65. Calvin Klein Collection sandals.

web extra!

LISTEN TO HARLEY VIERA-NEWTON’S FAVORITE NINETIES SONGS AT TEENVOGUE.COM!

GWEN STEFANI

(Remember the flatiron? Time to bring it back.) Harley and I agree this is our personal favorite. ÒIt’s pretty and girly, while still being comfortable and easy to dress up or down for day or night,Ó she says.

TAKE THREE: TECHNICOLOR RAVER

as only Miuccia Prada could rehash it. Think primary-color shifts, bra tops worn over dresses, sporty jerseys layered underneath, and backpacks, barrettes, and athletic socks. This is risky business. If you don’t have a master’s in layering, you would be advised to steer clear of this trend. As for me, I will be sticking by the adage that if you lived through it the first time around, sit it out the second. My memories of attending raves under the Brooklyn Bridge are good enough for me. Besides, I never really liked techno music to begin with.

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Clockwise from top right: JASON KIM; VINCE BUCCI/AFP/Getty Images; JEFFREY MAYER/WireImage/Getty Images; JASON KIM.

PALTROW

as seen at Jason Wu, Max Mara, and a slew of other spring shows. For inspiration, look no further than patrician blonde Carolyn Bessette on the day of her wedding to JFK Jr., or Gwyneth Paltrow arm in arm with Brad Pitt at the 1996 Oscars. Consider it a testament to its enduring style that this look needs no updating. Give the slip dress a daytime spin with shower slides, and keep the makeup minimal and the hair straight.

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My World

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EDITOR: JANE KELTNER DE VALLE

“I have an amazing dog named Barkley Bixby. He’s like a child to me.”

PAJAMA PARTY

“My favorite place to hang out in L.A. is my house. I’m really a homebody!”

From top: Marigot pajama set, $115. marigotcollection.com. Mary Green eye mask, $25. marygreen.com.

SARAH HYLAND

playlist “I’m a huge fan of Ed Sheeran, Ron Pope, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, and Lorde. As you can see, I like a wide range of music.”

From her top hangout spots to James Franco’s book, the Modern Family and Vampire Academy actress reveals her favorite things. 84

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KISS AND TELL

“I love Chanel lipstick— Superstition is the best color.”

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Clockwise from bottom left: Mary Evans Picture Library/Everett Collection; KAREN NEAL/ABC; ROBERT CHIASSON/Getty Images; courtesy of Topshop; STEPHANIE DINKEL; no credit; JOFF LEE/Getty Images; TOM GORMAN. Opposite page, clockwise from left: DOUG INGLISH/Trunk Archive; no credit; courtesy of Chanel; courtesy of Marigot; courtesy of Mary Green; no credit (2). Details, see In This Issue.

WorldMags.net SUNNY DELIGHT “Big, slouchy hats are my go-to accessory to wear on the beach.”

From left: Jaclyn Smith hat, $13. Kmart. Topshop bag, $64. topshop.com.

heart to heart

“For Christmas my boyfriend, Matt, gave me a ring from Tiffany & Co. that says ‘I Love You’ on it. I wear it all the time!”

FRIGHT NIGHT

“I’ll always love Modern Family’s first Halloween episode. Ed [O’Neill] and Sofia [Vergara] kept cracking me up. It was one of the only times I really couldn’t keep it together on set.”

magic kingdom “Disneyland is my favorite place on earth. I could spend hours there and not even go on the rides.”

READING LIST

“I just got James Franco’s book A California Childhood. It’s like looking into his diary, with all the old pictures, drawings, and journal entries.”

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sugar rush “I love candy—I have such a sweet tooth!”

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People Watching

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EDITOR: ANDREW BEVAN

Lily Collins in Chanel Haute Couture

Clockwise from left: KEVIN TACHMAN (3); BILLY FARRELL & DAVID X PRUTTING/bfanyc.com; COOPER NEILL/Getty Images for Chanel; BILLY FARRELL & DAVID X PRUTTING/bfanyc.com; COOPER NEILL/Getty Images for Chanel.

on y Wixs Lindsences to Hot da ho w , ip Ch ed live. perform

BEST WESTERN

Giddyap! Chanel-clad A-listers took over Dallas for a wild Texas-style shindig celebrating the label’s rollicking pre-fall collection.

Joan Smalls on the runway Laura Love in a Chanel Cruise dress

Karl Lagerfeld has an amazing eye for detail. Picking Dallas and running with that theme in a way that isn’t cartoony feels very authentic and cool —DAKOTA FANNING

Alexa Chung in a Chanel coat

Dakota Fanning in Chanel Haute Couture Kristen Stew art

watches Karl Lagerfe ld’s film The WorldMags.net Re turn at a popup

drive-in.

People Watching

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CALIFORNIA COOL

aero dynamic

Bethany wears a Bethany Mota Collection cardigan, $34, tee, $14, jeggings, $30, earrings, $5 for set of three, and necklace, $9. aeropostale.com. PHOTOGRAPHED BY DANIEL KING.

Fashion Editors: Mary Kate Steinmiller and Andrew Bevan; hair, Deycke Heidorn using Kérastase; makeup, Kristi Matamoros using Chanel.

Mini mogul Bethany Mota (aka YouTube sensation Macbarbie07) broadcasts her comfy, cute style in a new collection with Aéropostale.

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ethany Mota is having a major moment. At just 18 years old, the vlogger has achieved superstar status as YouTube’s Macbarbie07, sharing two or more videos daily with her loyal fan following of 4 million plus. These Motavators, as she calls them, tune in for Bethany’s take on everything from boys to beauty, including her signature “haul” videos, where the seasoned shopper shows off her newest fashion finds. ➤

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People Watching

SPRING COLLECTION HIGHLIGHTS

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Bethany Mota Collection jacket, $50, dress, $36, necklace, $8, and watch, $15. aeropostale.com.

It was only natural, then, that Bethany’s next step would be a foray into clothing design. Like something right out of a teen dream, Aéropostale came calling, and she jumped at the chance to translate her laid-back-but-girly style into her very own line. Composed of basics and statement pieces, playful accessories, and cheeky jewelry (“OMG” necklace, anyone?), the collection merges Bethany’s favorites (“I’m all about the overalls!”) with some major inspiration from her social media–savvy viewers, who like to keep her updated on their latest tastes. “I’m always on Twitter, and they send pictures of their outfits,” says Bethany, who incorporates the images into inspiration boards that she references when choosing everything from patterns to the fabric of the final pieces. Talk about market research! A material girl in a digital world, Bethany is nothing if not dedicated to her fans. She credits her connection with them for her meteoric success—no small statement, as she’s been at it since just 2009. “I’m all about building a relationship with viewers and getting to know them,” she says. “Their support is incredible, and I’m always going to be here for them.” And, of course, ensure that they have something cute to wear every step of the way. —AVERY SPOFFORD N

MEETING A FA

Clockwise from top left: DANIEL KING; STEPHANIE DINKEL (4); DANIEL KING; GEORGE PIMENTEL/Getty Images for Aéropostale.

Clockwise from left: Bethany Mota Collection tee, $14, necklace, $9, skirt, $28, and boots, $48. aeropostale.com.

RETAIL THERAPY

THE A-TEAM

Bethany Mota Collection short-all, $30, top, $16, plaid shirt, $28, hat, $15, and necklace, $6. aeropostale.com.

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People Watching

New York City street style

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Hanneli Mustaparta in an Acne jacket

Clockwise from top left: VANESSA JACKMAN (2); splashnews.com; STEFANO MASSÈ/indigitalimages ˇ .com/style.com; GORAN CIŽMEŠIJA/streetstyleseconds.com; VANESSA JACKMAN.

Zagreb, Croatia, street style

ASHISH SPRING 2014

Leandra Medine in Current/ Elliott jeans

SHABBY CHIC These frayed fashion plates are on a tear in distressed-but-not-amess denim.

WorldMags.netRihanna in an Acne skirt

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lenzuela Melissa Va

People Watching

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web extra!

TO MEET MORE OF OUR INST@LISTERS, GO TO TEENVOGUE.COM/ INSTALIST.

JENN IM

@IMJENNIM OM IMJENNIM.C

nd was I’m 22 a ised in ra d n born a ing up, I w ro G . L.A elieved blindly b as about w n fashio the following rrectly.’ o ‘c s d n tre learned Now I’ve are no re that the rongs w rights or

MELISSA AND STEPHANIE VALENZUELA @THEFASHIONCITIZEN THEFASHIONCITIZEN.COM

We are two frugal fashionistas in Scottsdale, Arizona, who prove you don’t need to spend a ton of money to look great

instant gratification

OLIVIA LOPEZ @LUSTTFORLIFE LUSTTFORLIFE.COM

CLAIRE GEIST @CLAIREGEIST DELUNEBLOG.COM

I’m a 21-year-old redheaded weirdo studying art history and fashion theory in New York City. I wear a good amount of vintage because there’s something great about a piece that had a mysterious former life that you, as the wearer, are now building upon

CARLY A. HEITLINGER @COLLEGEPREPSTER THECOLLEGEPREPSTER.COM

I’m an L.A.-based blogger, a frequent flier, and a road trip enthusiast. My philosophy is: Be your own muse and stay true to yourself, your style, and your budget

I love nail polish, coffee, reading, and bows. I’m a totally normal girl (and Georgetown University graduate) who’s just living her WorldMags.net dreams in New York City

Clockwise from top left: courtesy of Jenn Im; courtesy of Melissa and Stephanie Valenzuela; MICHAEL PAGAN; F.E. CASTLEBERRY; courtesy of Claire Geist.

Meet (and follow) Teen Vogue’s Inst@list—an exclusive collective of our favorite emerging style influencers on Instagram.

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EDITOR: JANE KELTNER DE VALLE FLOWER POWER

A Céline vest snapped by streetstyle photographer Tommy Ton outside the shows during Paris Fashion Week

STREET SCENE

TOMMY TON/Trunk Archive

Whether on the runway or in the front row, floral was everywhere at fashion week. Not your garden-variety blooms, the pretty print sees a major update in moody, dark shades and strong shapes. ➤

SPRING FORWARD From trends to know to major new accessories, we’ve got your cheat sheet for the best fashion finds.

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Prada bracelets, $275–$330 each. prada.com.

PRADA BLING

ER HILFIG TOMM Y

DKNY

ALEXANDER WANG

THE SHORT LIST

All that glitters doesn’t have to be gold. This season the storied Italian fashion house took a cue from 1940s glamour for a collection of oversize baubles in bright jewel tones. And though the shapes are decidedly vintage, the pieces get a touch of the 21st century with their cool, sporty bands. Who says old can’t be new again?

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Listen up, sk8er girls: The long short is hot for spring! This knee-length, low-rise silhouette was all over New York Fashion Week, from Alexander Wang’s sleek version to Tommy Hilfiger’s beachready Bermudas. Now that’s a trend we can get on board with.

Clockwise from top: STEPHANIE DINKEL; FABIO IONÀ/indigitalimages.com/style.com; YANNIS VLAMOS/indigitalimages.com/style.com; MARCUS TONDO/indigitalimages.com/style.com.

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WorldMags.net We’re wild for London-based brand Mother of Pearl and its vibrant prints. Our pick for the season? This cool slip-on sneaker. Mother of Pearl sneakers, $385. net-a-porter.com.

Khoi Le backpack, price upon request. shop.khoi--le.com. STEP 1 Grab a canvas backpack in a neutral hue. STEP 2 Use spray paint to coat it in your favorite tones.

RISING STAR

Clockwise from top left: UMBERTO FRATINI/indigitalimages.com/style.com; courtesy of Mother of Pearl; JOANNA MCCLURE; JASON KIBBLER; no credit. Details, see In This Issue.

LABEL TO LOVE

STEP 3 Add fun pops of color with bright splatters.

IN THE FALL 20

13 PRADA CAMP

AIGN

STEP 4 Clip on carabiners and cool braided key chains for your very own Chanelinspired look.

NAME: Malaika Firth AGE: 19 HOMETOWN: Mombasa, Kenya CATWALK STATS: 55 shows, including Proenza Schouler, Burberry Prorsum, Prada, and Valentino—more than any other new model for spring 2014.

THE DIY

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TEEN VOGUE, APRIL

SNOOP DOG

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Jazzy wears a Rodnik x Peanuts sweatshirt, $120, beanie, $59, and backpack, $120. Topshop jeans, $84, and earrings, $12. Details, see In This Issue.

comic

TRIP

PHOTOGRAPHED BY EMMA TEMPEST.

It Brit actress Jazzy de Lisser shows her funny side in the new Rodnik x Peanuts mash-up.

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OUR PICKS

From left: Rodnik x Peanuts T-shirt, $65, and cap, $79. therodnikband.com.

f you want to wear your art on your sleeve, look no further than U.K. label The Rodnik Band. From Andy Warhol’s Campbell’s soup can to Salvador Dalí’s lobster phone, major Pop pieces are the inspiration for designer Philip Colbert’s bright and playful clothes. For spring he turned to another collection of iconic images: the Peanuts comics. We enlisted ultracool actress Jazzy de Lisser to take the eye-catching looks for a spin on the streets of London. The 22-year-old Brit began her acting career when a friend asked her to audition for an independent film. “I always wanted to direct and I’d never done any acting,” she explains. “I decided to give it a go and ended up in the lead role.” The movie went on to win an award at the Sundance Film Festival and inspired de Lisser to enroll in drama school in New York City. Now she spends her time jetting between Los Angeles and London for auditions and parts. And though her day-to-day style veers toward the basic, she’s always up for trying a fun look. “What I wear depends completely on my mood,” she says. “I usually think less is more, but some days I wake up and feel the complete opposite!” For those times, she’s got her Rodnik pieces to help turn heads. “The collection is great because you can keep it really casual or dress it up,” she says. “I love it!” —VICTORIA LEWIS

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Stylist: Camilla Pole; hair, Ben Jones using Fudge Urban; makeup, Kate Lindsey; products, courtesy of The Rodnik Band.

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REBEL YELL

From left: American Retro jacket, $350. americanretro .fr. Denim & Supply Ralph Lauren jacket, $298. Macy’s. ASOS jacket, $86. asos.com.

Inset: ZINA CHARKOPLIA/fashionvibe.net

PHOTOGRAPHED BY JOANNA MCCLURE.

see more.

UNLOCK A SLIDE SHOW OF EMBELLISHED DENIM JACKETS WITH OUR INSIDER APP FOR IPHONE, OR VISIT TEENVOGUEINSIDER .COM ON YOUR MOBILE BROWSER.

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tough love Channel your inner rock star in a decked-out denim jacket.

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Blogger Zina Charkoplia in the trend

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TRUE BLUE

People Are WorldMags.net

Maia wears a Marc by Marc Jacobs dress. Mark Cross handbag. Details, see In This Issue. PHOTOGRAPHED BY MICHAEL HAUPTMAN.

Talking About

EDITOR: DANA MATHEWS

aussie in wonderland Maia Mitchell steals the spotlight in ABC Family’s hit show The Fosters.

t

Fashion Editor: Sasha Kelly; hair, Caile Noble for John Frieda; makeup, Gloria Noto for Chanel Beauté.

elevision has introduced audiences to all sorts of memorable families: the ghoulish Addams Family, the bubbly Brady Bunch, and Full House’s wholesome Tanners, to name a few. But not many prime-time households are as unforgettable as the Fosters, the clan in ABC Family’s groundbreaking series about a lesbian couple raising their biological son alongside several adopted and foster children. The Fosters, now the network’s most popular show after Pretty Little Liars, features a stellar ensemble cast—and a breakout star in 20-year-old Maia Mitchell, whose turn as Callie Jacob, a teenager with a troubled past, should not be missed. The Teen Beach Movie alum’s journey to landing the part involved traveling halfway around the world—from her hometown of Lismore, Australia, to Los Angeles—just to audition. ➤

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MAKING A SPLASH

Ohne Titel crop top, $250. Red Valentino skirt, $450. Jimmy Choo shoes. Details, see In This Issue.

IN A SCENE FROM THE FOSTERS

SPRING BREAK BOOKS

Vacation’s best accessory: the perfect book, of course.

THE VIGILANTE POETS OF SELWYN ACADEMY

THE ART OF SECRETS

Where there’s smoke, there’s fire…and, apparently, valuable art! When the Khan family’s home is mysteriously burned to the ground, the funds from a priceless painting come to their rescue. Through unique journal entries, articles, and interviews, a tangled web of unusual secrets unfolds.

It’s up to Ethan, his friends, and their poetry-inspired protest to take down the sleazy reality TV show that has hijacked their school. —LIANA WESTON

THE STRANGE AND BEAUTIFUL SORROWS OF AVA LAVENDER THE HERE AND NOW

From the author who brought us The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants comes the gripping page-turner about a girl who’s willing to risk it all for love and the fate of the future world.

Every 15-year-old just wants to fit in with the crowd. But when you’re born with wings, it’s hard not to stand out. This fantasy follows Ava Lavender’s discovery of her one-of-a-kind self.

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TEENVOGUE.COM

Clockwise from top: MICHAEL HAUPTMAN; ADAM TAYLOR/ABC Family; courtesy of Random House; courtesy of Candlewick Press; courtesy of Algonquin Books; courtesy of Random House.

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’ve never loved a role this much,” Maia gushes. The actress’s immediate connection to Callie helped her identify with the complex character. “If you look beyond her hard life, Callie and I are similar,” she says. “She’s sweet, loyal, and loving.” Personality traits aren’t all the two share: “A family member of mine went through a situation like Callie’s, with a foster kid,” she reveals. And growing up with a younger brother helped Maia bond with her on-screen brothers, played by Jake T. Austin, David Lambert, and Hayden Byerly. “We’re like siblings, on and off set,” she admits. Maia says executive producer Jennifer Lopez (yes, J.Lo!) is among her most enthusiastic supporters. “Recently the cast introduced her at a dinner in Washington, D.C.,” Maia says. “When we stepped offstage, Jennifer hugged me and said, ‘I’m so proud of you!’ She’s awesome.” Still, Maia says there are fans—many living within the foster care system—who expect the show to portray the darker side of their reality. “There is abuse and mistreatment,” Maia acknowledges. “In later episodes, Callie will spend time with girls dealing with a more difficult foster upbringing.” When she isn’t busy filming, Maia finds time for her passions: singing and songwriting. She names ’60s folk icon Joni Mitchell as her musical inspiration. And when it comes to acting, Maia insists the sky’s the limit. “I want to do theater, TV, movies,” she says, citing Claire Danes as an idol, “as long as the role allows me to grow as an actress and a person.” —ANTHONY ROTUNNO

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Beauty& Health

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PHIL OH/streetpeeper.com

EDITOR: ELAINE WELTEROTH

MASTER CLASS From off-duty-model hair to perfect lashes, discover the backstage beauty tips you need to know now.

TEENVOGUE.COM

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PARTING WAYS

On the runways hair was up, down, wigged, and crowned, but the middle part emerged as the easiest (and most affordable!) way to update your style in real life. It was wet-look chic at Marni and ultrasleek at Chloé. Concerned it favors only perfectly symmetrical faces (like Sui He’s and Liu Wen’s, here)? Don’t be. Adding a bit of height at the crown makes this flattering for all. ➤ MARCH 2014

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PROENZA PREMIERE

FULL-ON FRINGE Your new must-have for major lashes.

Cuffs, feathers, and gems—spring’s

MARNI

4 TOP IT OFF

Sephora Collection Lash Fan Brush #220, $18. sephora.com.

LOUIS VUITTON

ANNA SUI

VALENTINO

Clockwise from top: M.A.C. Proenza Schouler Nail Lacquer in Bougainvillea, $18, Lipstick in Woodrose, $22, Pro Longwear Lip Pencil in Dynamo, $21, and Pro Longwear Eye Liner in Rich Experience, $21. All, maccosmetics.com.

When makeup guru Val Garland perfected the mega-glam lashes at Hervé Léger by Max Azria, it wasn’t with a mascara wand. “I always use a fan brush,” she reveals. The key is to wiggle the fan into the root after applying a generous coat of black mascara. “It fills in any gaps and creates the illusion of thicker lashes,” Val says.

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Clockwise from top left: TOM GORMAN (2); imaxtree.com (2); GIANNI PUCCI/indigitalimages.com/style.com; imaxtree.com; GIANNI PUCCI/indigitalimages.com/style.com.

Meet M.A.C. and Proenza Schouler’s pretty little makeup line.

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Crack the code for the off-duty-model look. “IT CAN’T BE TOO PERFECT,”

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says hair legend Guido. “When you have a great outfit on, there’s something even cooler about leaving the hair a bit messy.”

“THINK OF HAIR PRODUCTS AS YOU WOULD COSMETICS,”

Guido notes. It’s all about layering. For a slept-in finish, try Redken Guts 10 Volume Spray Foam ($17, redken .com for salons) on wet hair to lift roots, then finish with Balmain Texturizing Salt Spray ($28, wonderlandbeautyparlor.com).

“BLOW-DRYING IS KEY,”

Guido says. A DIY trick we picked up from stylist Paul Hanlon: Blow-dry your hair in a ponytail. It makes even the thickest, heaviest strands featherlight.

VIP TREATMENT: “When skin feels like it’s taken a beating, it’s susceptible to breakouts,” explains celeb facialist Joanna Vargas. Take note from models who were treated to luxurious mini facials before hitting their makeup chairs backstage at Balmain and The Row.

FACE TIME

MODEL HAIR, BOTTLED

BRIGHT IDEA: To look lit from within instantly, makeup artist Uzo dabs Nars The Multiple in Copacabana ($39, Bloomingdale’s) onto cheekbones before applying foundation. BRONZE AMBITION: At Michael Kors, makeup guru Dick Page mixed two tones of the designer’s Bronze Powder ($50 each, Macy’s)—a hint of red on the apples and taupe for subtle contours— to achieve the perfect back-fromvacation glow.

ORANGE IS THE NEW RED The season’s head-turning shade works on everyone—promise! Maybelline New York Color Sensational Vivids Lipcolor in Electric Orange, $8. Target.

IN FULL FLOWER Not a floral kind of girl? Think again.

DOLCE & GABBANA

The latest crop of floral fragrances range from full-on pretty to downright rebellious. Take Dolce—our top pick for an everyday scent—which offers a hint of both qualities. “It’s a delicate and feminine harmony of white flowers,” says designer Stefano Gabbana. The blend of sheer musks give it a distinctive quality without being too in-your-face. Also consider peony-based options like Elizabeth and James Nirvana White (soft and creamy) or Gucci Flora 1966 (slightly sweet and powdery)— they’re fragrant but not overwhelming. Craving a romantic perfume? Aerin Lilac Path is positively swoonworthy. Should you prefer lighter, fresher scents, try Kenzo Couleur Yellow (citrusy) or Calvin Klein Endless Euphoria (fruity). In the mood for something with an edge? Check out Reiss Grey Flower: The combination of jasmine, patchouli, and amber is beyond cool, and as far away as you can get from your mother’s standby scent. ÑANNE-MARIE GUARNIERI At left: Dolce & Gabbana Dolce. At right, clockwise from top: Reiss Grey Flower, Aerin Lilac Path, Gucci Flora 1966, Kenzo Couleur Yellow, Elizabeth and James Nirvana White, Calvin Klein Endless Euphoria. Details, see In This Issue.

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FIND YOUR NEW SIGNATURE SCENT WITH OUR

INSIDER APP FOR IPHONE, OR VISIT TEENVOGUE INSIDER.COM ON YOUR MOBILE BROWSER. WorldMags.net

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Clockwise from top left: JASON LLOYD-EVANS; LUCAS VISSER; TOM GORMAN (3); VITTORIO ZUNINO CELOTTO/Getty Images.

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The pro tricks that Beauty will change the way you glow forever. & Health WorldMags.net

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LINE UP

Minimal manis, major impact. Fashion’s go-to, Jin Soon Choi, explains the art of pared-down nails.

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ail art started as a microtrend. In-the-know pros at cult salons would hand-paint embellished tips for a few select clients. Then, thanks to busy fingers, they were blogged, pinned, Liked, shared, tweeted—and just like that, over-the-top manis were everywhere. The inevitable result? “People got tired of blingy nails,” says Jin Soon Choi, one of fashion’s most lauded manicurists. “Now they want something more modern and clean.” Case in point: the stark white, black-striped manicure she created for Tibi’s spring 2014 show, above. “I saw so many patterns, textures, and colors on the runways,” Jin notes. “The nails can’t clash with the clothing.” But that doesn’t mean they can’t be fun. After Jin whipped up a custom blend of white lacquer for models backstage (“White polish is in, definitely”), she took it up a notch with thin stripes of glittery black polish that darted across just three ABSTRACT ART nails—two horizontal, one vertical. The Jin Soon Nail Polish in Obsidian and result: a new wave of impossibly chic Kookie White, $18 nail art. But before you dive in headfirst, each. sephora.com. remember that you have to draw the line somewhere.… —PHILLIP PICARDI

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From top: ANNA WEBBER/Getty Images for Jin Soon; TOM GORMAN.

SHOW OF HANDS “It’s really on-trend to have simple nail art,” says manicurist Jin Soon Choi, who created this look backstage at Tibi.

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Model BFFs go head-to-head over the best in beauty.

GEORGIA MAY JAGGER

“I love a good oil. I leave Philip B’s Rejuvenating Oil [$30, nordstrom.com] in overnight.”

WHAT’S YOUR HAIR SECRET? WHO IS YOUR BEAUTY ICON? WHAT’S IN YOUR MAKEUP BAG? WHAT’S YOUR SIGNATURE SCENT?

VS.

“My mom [Jerry Hall]. She loves to have fun with makeup. Her fave: Rimmel London Kate Moss Lasting Finish Matte Lipstick in #111 [shown below; $6, CVS].”

SUKI WATERHOUSE

“I use a lot of Bumble and Bumble products—the Surf Spray and Thickening Hairspray [$25 and $28, Sephora] are great. They’re always used on shoots.”

Clockwise from top left: imaxtree.com; DAVE M. BENETT/Getty Images for Burberry; courtesy of Bumble and Bumble; JASON LLOYD-EVANS; Everett Collection/Rex USA; TOM GORMAN; courtesy of Burberry (2); courtesy of Just Cavalli; JASON LLOYD-EVANS; LUCAS VISSER; TOM GORMAN; Warner Bros./Photo Fest; courtesy of Philip B.

Beauty & Health WorldMags.net

“Marianne Faithfull in The Girl on a Motorcycle. Motorbikes are the best, and leather outfits make me melt.”

FAVE SPRING TREND?

“Mascara is key. I wear Rimmel London ScandalEyes Retro Glam Mascara [$7, Target]. Before I apply, I heat my eyelash curler with a blow-dryer.”

“I’M INTO BACKPACKS. THEY’RE SO ’90S!”

“Something floral and quite light, like Just Cavalli [$60 for 1.7 oz., Macy’s].”

“The Burberry Velvet Foundation [$55, burberry.com] is amazing for an allover glow. I’m also into brow products, like Benefit’s Brow Zings palette [$30, Sephora]. I just dyed mine lighter. A little goes a long way....”

“Burberry Brit Rhythm [$70 for 1.7 oz., burberry .com]. I love the lavender aroma— it reminds me of when I first smelled it as a child. I thought it was the most gorgeous scent ever!”

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FAVE SPRING TREND?

“BURBERRY’S PASTELS. THEY’RE VERY ’60S.”

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ROCK CANDY

Yumi wears a Prada dress and top. DKNY x I Still Love You NYC visor, $210. On right wrist: Janis by Janis Savitt black cuff, $100. Toga green bracelet, $154. Proenza Schouler pouch, $395. On left wrist: Janis by Janis Savitt yellow bracelet, $100, and black bracelet, $80. Eddie Borgo medallion cuff, $350, and ring, $275. Details, see In This Issue.

FASHION EDITOR: HAVANA LAFFITTE.

Be a fashion all-star in the season’s glammed-up take on sportswear. Photographed by Gregory Harris.

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POINT WorldMags.net GUARD

Opening Ceremony tee, $175. Thakoon Addition blouse. Christopher Kane skirt. Atelier Swarovski by Christopher Kane necklace. On right wrist: Issey Miyake bangle, $320. Jeremy Scott clutch, $200. On left wrist: Mitchel Primrose cuff. Rag & Bone shoes. Details, see In This Issue.

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TEAM PLAYER Tommy Hilfiger red dress. Stolen Girlfriends Club tank, $80. Hache culottes and striped pants. Joseph large metal collar. Atelier Swarovski by Christopher Kane necklace, $445. On both wrists: Sacai wristbands. Marni shoes.

BEAUTY NOTE:

Get cool, piecey texture by running Garnier Fructis Mess Maker Power Putty through the ends of your hair.

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VISION WorldMags.net QUEST

Ashish top. DKNY x Opening Ceremony long-sleeve tee, $165. James Long skirt. Adidas Originals x Opening Ceremony cap, $140. Kenzo pouch. DKNY sneakers, $115. Details, see In This Issue.

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GYM CLASS HERO Toga Pulla dress, $210. Bec & Bridge bralette, $120. Louis Vuitton leggings. Bond Hardware necklace, $275. Furla bag, $448. Prada bracelet.

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LINE DEFENSE WorldMags.net

Hood By Air top. Creatures of the Wind white shirt, $395. Milly skirt, $365. 3.1 Phillip Lim bag. Toga Pulla belt, $340. Prada socks, $315. Marni shoes. Details, see In This Issue.

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THE MVP

Sacai dress. Piece d’Anarchive cap. Eddie Borgo bracelet, $400. Kate Spade New York clutch. Toga Pulla sandals. In this story: hair, Tomo Jidai using Oribe Hair Care; makeup, Karan Franjola using Chanel; nails, Kiyo Okada for Chanel Le Vernis; set design, Eli Metcalf at Marek and Associates.

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Broadway, Glee, and everything in between— Jonathan Groff has been by Lea Michele’s side through it all. The star opens up to her best friend about how she stays strong and happy. Photographed by Giampaolo Sgura.

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o one knows you better than your best friend. Lea Michele and I have shared some pretty unique experiences since we met eight years ago. We’ve simulated sex more than 1,000 times onstage in Spring Awakening. We’ve performed everything from show tunes to “Like a Virgin” on Glee. I’ve watched her sing for the President and accept Billboard’s first-ever Triple Threat Award, and I’ve seen her laugh so hard that she peed her pants. Since Glee, she has inspired people across the world with her unapologetic ambition, insane talent, and astonishing grace. Me, especially. I sat down with Lea in Venice, California, at one of her favorite restaurants, Gjelina, to talk about her life and her debut album, and to ask the questions only a best friend is allowed to ask. JONATHAN GROFF: Sitting here in Venice, it’s a far cry from when we met in that dark building in Chelsea, auditioning for Spring Awakening. LEA MICHELE: It’s so crazy. If you told me then that now we’d be here doing an interview because I was on the cover of Teen Vogue for my album and you have your show Looking, I would be like… LM & JG: [Simultaneously] You are crazy! ➤

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RAY OF LIGHT

Lea wears an A.P.C. dress customized by Teen Vogue, $415. Mokuba ribbon (worn in hair), $4 per yard. Catbird ring, $148. Details, see In This Issue. FASHION EDITOR: PATRICK MACKIE.

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LM: You were literally raised on a farm in

Pennsylvania, and I grew up working in the city. The fact that we became best friends is so strange. JG: What do you expect, when we had to be so intimate with each other in Spring Awakening during such formative years? LM: If I had to kiss you right now, I most certainly could not. JG: Really? LM: I don’t think I could. I really think I would laugh too hard. Whereas we used to make the hell out. JG: Especially onstage. There was that one time—well, maybe I shouldn’t talk about it while we’re eating.... LM: You were sick! JG: Yes. During the hayloft scene, where we always open-mouth kissed. I had the stomach flu and I was going to vomit in your mouth. You opened your mouth and I was like, “Nuh-uh.” LM: At intermission you were vomiting so hard! I was laughing hysterically. JG: It wasn’t funny! I was in so much pain. Ugh. LM: Remember that night we hid from security and slept in the scary-ass Eugene O’Neill Theatre with John Gallagher, Jr.? Oh, God, we had the best time. We sat on the stage with a bottle of wine and candles and prayed to the theater gods for blessing us with such success. We pricked our fingers—I still have a black dot on my finger from that, by the way. We put a little blood on a piece of paper and framed it. Christine Jones [the scenic designer] took that piece of paper and built it into the set that now goes around with all the Spring Awakening touring productions. JG: When we carved our names in the theater, you said something so sweet. I still remember it because it meant so much to me. ➤

SWEET DISPOSITION

ASOS dress, $68. Horses Atelier slip, $335. American Eagle Outfitters necklace (worn as headband), $16. House of Lavande bracelet, $348. Opposite page: Jonathan wears an A.P.C. sweater, $370. Calvin Klein Collection shorts. Burberry Prorsum shoes. Lea wears a Marc by Marc Jacobs dress. American Eagle Outfitters flats, $30. Details, see In This Issue.

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FIELD OF DREAMS

Jonathan wears a Burberry Prorsum shirt and shoes. Calvin Klein Collection shorts. Lea wears a Loft sweater, $60. Guess dress, $98. Cult Gaia headband, $75. Catbird ring, $148. Dogeared necklace, $54. Lulu Frost charm. Details, see In This Issue.

e i n r f d t s e b a it’s , d you nee WorldMags.net

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LM: Are you going to cry?! JG: A little bit. LM: What’s wrong with you? Get it together! JG: You said, “I would give up this entire experience for

our relationship.” LM: It’s so true. At the end of the day I would most

certainly give up Spring Awakening, which was the greatest experience of my life, to have met you. In this lifetime, if there is anything you need, it’s a best friend. It’s so crazy to talk about Spring Awakening because I feel like we’ve lived 10 lives since then. I was the one always saying to you, “I’ll never get that part. No one will ever hire me.” The biggest limits are the ones you make for yourself. You believed in me a lot. JG: And now your debut album is about to be released. It’s kind of incredible, huh? LM: During Glee, I felt like I was scratching that itch of being an artist. I was at a great place in my life and I was so unbelievably happy—my relationship with Cory made me feel like I could reach for the stars and more. So I was like, “I’m going to challenge myself and do this record now.” It’s obviously pop, but I think it shows me off as a singer. JG: I feel like I’ve never heard you sound this way before. LM: It’s me. It’s Lea. It’s not Rachel Berry. It’s not Lea on Broadway…. JG: Why is it called Louder? LM: Louder is like me. I’m loud, I come from an Italian family, I don’t stop talking. JG: Oh, I know! What’s your favorite song on the album? LM: My favorite song is, 100 percent, “You’re Mine.” I listened to it the other day—it was the one song I had the most emotional reaction to, just because that’s my relationship with Cory. JG: What was Cory’s favorite song? LM: He was such a fan, you don’t understand. He would be like, “You’re going to be a pop star! What are we going to do? Are we going to, like, go on the road?” He would say, “This is going to be big!” And I’d be like, “I don’t know.” He heard every song and gave me his notes on everything. He loved “Battlefield.” I’m getting

chills thinking about it. I would say “Burn with You” was his favorite. He came into the studio that day. JG: I feel like the world has been compassionately watching to see how you would react to what happened. And across the board, you’ve presented yourself in such a classy way. You really are the quintessential role model. And as your friend, watching you go through what you went through, I saw you exhibit so much strength. Where do you think that strength comes from? I can’t comprehend it. LM: I somehow feel the insane love Cory and I had for each other morphed into this strength that I have right now. There’s just something about knowing he’s watching everything I’m doing and feeling like I have to do everything now not just for me but for him. I also have a safety net below me—if I fall or if it’s too much, my friends and family will be there to catch me. JG: But there must be things you do in your daily life to stay balanced. LM: I’ve always been the kind of person who puts self-care and personal relationships and family before everything. Building strong relationships with people who matter—especially building a strong relationship with yourself—is the most important thing. I’ve been able to get through this because I worked really hard to get my feet on the ground in life to begin with. If I’d come into this situation in an unstable place as a person, I couldn’t be doing what I’m doing. I’ve been given the position of being a role model for girls, and I take it on with such pride. What I’m dealing with right now is the most unfortunate, horrendous thing in the world, but if I could take anything from it and make it positive, that’s the only thing I can do. There is a level of strength in me that people can go their whole lives without touching, but it’s there for you to harness and to find. If I could do anything to not make this my reality, I 100 percent would. But this is my situation and I’m going to do whatever I can to make it good for my life and somewhat OK for myself and really beneficial to the people who are watching me. I also have a charity I work with, and I’m really proud of that. continued ➤ 167

“I somehow feel the insane love Cory and I had for each other morphed into this strength that I have right now”

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IN FULL BLOOM

Red Valentino peacoat. ASOS dress, $68. American Eagle Outfitters necklace (worn as headband), $16. Details, see In This Issue. In this story: hair, Ben Skervin for Vidal Sassoon Pro Series; makeup, Mélanie Inglessis at The Magnet Agency; nails, Ashlie Johnson for Chanel; prop styling, Bette Adams for Mary Howard Studio; production, Dario Callegher at Pstudio Inc.

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CAMP

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Get to work! Utility meets style in the season’s militaryinspired threads. Photographed by Scott Trindle.

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BLUE STEEL WorldMags.net

Megane wears a Joe’s jumpsuit, $189. Elizabeth and James tee, $145. Current/Elliott sweatshirt (around waist), $148. Carhartt coat (on chair), $95. L.L. Bean socks, $19. Dr. Martens shoes, $110. Details, see In This Issue. FASHION EDITOR: VÉRONIQUE DIDRY.

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ALL FOR ONE

American Eagle Outfitters overalls, $80. Current/Elliott shirt, $218. ’47 Brand cap, $25. L.L. Bean socks, $19. Nike sneakers, $110. Details, see In This Issue.

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SHORT WorldMags.netORDER

Julia wears a Theory by Olivier Theyskens sweater. Citizens of Humanity shorts, $158. Racket beanie, $41. On shoulder: Hermès bag. Johnny Farah belt, $265. L.L. Bean socks, $19.

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STRIPE SEARCH

7 For All Mankind men’s shirt, $148. U.S. Wings T-shirt, $18. Rebecca Taylor pants, $250. ’47 Brand cap, $30. Kaufman’s Army & Navy belt, $12. Details, see In This Issue.

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PRECIOUS WorldMags.net CARGO

Isabel Marant Étoile sweatshirt, $280. Rock Revival shorts with belt, $99. Hye Park and Lune jacket (around waist), $249.

BEAUTY NOTE:

Blast Tresemmé Fresh Start Renewing Dry Shampoo from roots to mid-lengths for easy, touchable hair.

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FUNCTIONAL CHIC DKNY Jeans shirt, $80. Express men’s tee, $23. Textile Elizabeth and James jeans, $268. Albertus Swanepoel hat, $250. On right shoulder: Chanel backpack. Details, see In This Issue.

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GROUND WorldMags.net FORCE

Tommy Hilfiger jacket, $349, and pants, $99. Lids beanie, $13. On left shoulder: Donna Karan New York belt. Kaufman’s Army & Navy belt, $12. Wigwam socks, $13. Clarks boots, $120. In this story: hair, Vi at Management+Artists; makeup, Adrien Pinault at Management+Artists; nails, Elsa Durrens using Chanel Le Vernis; set design, Claude Neron at Rose Paris; production, Ben Faraday at octopix.fr.

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MASTER CLASS

Misty spends much of her time mentoring ballet students. Here, a group of girls from the Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis School at American Ballet Theatre, home of the new Misty-inspired diversity initiative Project Plié. Misty wears a Jack Henry New York crop top, $175. American Apparel sports bra, $34. Details, see In This Issue. FASHION EDITOR: JAMES VALERI.

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amazing

GRACE

Making waves in the ballet world is nothing new for Misty Copeland, who fought racism and body shaming on her journey to become the first black soloist in 20 years at the prestigious American Ballet Theatre. In this excerpt from her memoir, Life in Motion, she tells all. WorldMags.net Photographed by Will Davidson. MONTH 20XX

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PRETTY TOUGH

WorldMags.net Misty wears a Bess NYC jacket. Live The Process unitard, $245. Details, see In This Issue. In this story: hair, Enrico Mariotti using Kérastase; makeup, Sam Addington for Chanel.

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allet has long been the province of the white and wealthy. Our daily toe-crushing exercises make pointe shoes as disposable as tissues, but they can cost as much as $80 a pair. I came from a San Pedro, California, family that didn’t always have enough food to eat, let alone money to spend on a hobby, and it wasn’t until I was 13 years old that I could even take my first ballet class. Most of my dance peers had grown up immersed in the arts, putting on their first tutus not long after they learned to talk. They had summered in Europe, while I didn’t get my first passport until I was 17. Their families had weekend homes. I had spent part of my adolescence living on the floor of a shabby motel with my single mom. But I also stood out in another, even more profound, way. I was a little brown-skinned girl in a sea of whiteness. I was 19 years old and had just been promoted to American Ballet Theatre’s corps de ballet. The corps is an integral part of a dance company, the base that helps to weave the balletic tale. But for most ballerinas the goal is to soar beyond it, to stand out enough to get a HER BOOK

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Clockwise from top left: WILL DAVIDSON; courtesy of Misty Copeland; KEVIN MAZUR/WireImage/NPG/Getty Images.

g Performin with the y ar nd lege Prince

Copyright © 2014 by Misty Copeland. From the forthcoming book Life in Motion: An Unlikely Ballerina by Misty Copeland, to be published by Touchstone, a division of Simon & Schuster, Inc. Printed by permission.

WorldMags.net “My backup plan

featured part, and hopefully, one day, become a principal— that small band of stars. For now, though, I was just one of the cattle, and it was intensely competitive. No one in the main company knew that I was a prodigy who had started training 10 years later than most girls, nor did they care to find out. My reputation didn’t precede me; I had to start from scratch. I felt that the other dancers, and even some of the instructors, were constantly judging me, and that many wondered why I was there at all. Perhaps some of it was in my head, but despite my love for ABT, I felt very much alone. When my second year in the corps came, I had another obstacle in my way: I was not the same ballerina that ABT had known before. I had finally had my first period and gained 10 pounds. Where there had been buds that could barely fill a bra, my breasts became full and voluptuous. They were so foreign to me that they were uncomfortably heavy, and I was startled when I looked in the mirror. My body had completely changed. Like myself, I soon realized that ABT, too, was searching for the little girl that I had been. In the corps, you’re constantly switching and sharing costumes with other dancers in up to three different casts of the same ballets. There isn’t time or money for the company to have costumes tailored to each individual dancer and body. That year I was to perform in Giselle and Swan Lake. But the costumes I was given, handed down from other dancers with their boy-like frames, were too tight in the chest. The wardrobe department would have to let a seam out here, another seam there, to make them fit. I was bewildered and embarrassed—I could feel my confidence start to slip away. Finally, ABT’s artistic staff called me in to tell me that I needed to lose weight, though those were not the words they used. Telling already-thin women to slim down might cause legal problems. Instead, the more polite word, ubiquitous in ballet, was lengthening. “You need to lengthen, Misty,’’ a staffer said. “Just so you don’t lose your classical line.’’ I was five feet two and just over a hundred pounds. They suggested a nutritionist, but the company wouldn’t pay for it, leaving me boxed in. I was trying to survive on a corps member’s salary—$679 a week—in New York, the most expensive of cities. And now I had this additional pressure to try and hire a specialist to help me lose weight. Like so many things that came late in my life—my introduction to ballet, a more mature body—I was also starting to feel another emotion most young people experience years earlier, often while they’re still in high school: rebellion. “Who do they think they’re talking to?’’ I would mumble to myself after a long, stressful day. “I have so much talent. Why do I have to be stick-thin?” My backup plan was to outdance everyone, to be so technically perfect and unbelievably lyrical in my movements that all anyone would be able to see was my talent, not my breasts or curves or the color of my skin. Many assume that eating disorders run rampant in the ballet world. In a profession that is so focused on

was to outdance everyone...so that all anyone would be able to see was my talent, not my breasts or curves or the color of my skin”

appearance, where athleticism and a certain aesthetic are key, dancers will of course think about their weight. Yes, sometimes their eating patterns will become unhealthy. For young people who join a high-pressure, high-status company like ABT, it can be easy to feel adrift, like you don’t belong. And in your search for stability, it might be tempting to change one of the few things you can control: your body. But contrary to myth, there are no weigh-ins by company staff. There are no stern warnings to lose weight “or else.” I can honestly say that in my 13 years with ABT, I have known only a handful of dancers who suffered from an eating disorder like anorexia. It never crossed my mind to starve myself or purge what I had eaten. And gradually, I began to find my balance. It was far from instantaneous—in fact, I think it took me roughly five years to truly understand my body. I had breasts and muscles, but, yes, I was still a ballerina. And ABT, seeing how hard I had worked and how well I was performing, eventually stopped asking me to lengthen. They came to see things my way, that my curves are part of who I am as a dancer, not something I need to lose in order to become one. I still worry, far more than I should, about what the ballet world thinks of me—whether I will ever be accepted and seen as a well-rounded artist deserving of respect. Or will I forever be “the black ballerina,” an oddity who doesn’t quite compare? But in my moments of clarity I envision all the people whose lives have been touched by my story, who upon seeing my journey know that you can start late, look different, be uncertain, and still succeed. I’ve come so far from the first ballet class I took at age 13 in my baggy gym clothes at the Boys & Girls Club. I know that by being here now, in this rarefied, difficult, elitist, beautiful world, I have made my mark on history and ballet. I will forever fight, performing like it’s my last show. And I will love every minute of it.

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a

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udrey had been a smoker for four-and-a-half years before she decided to try an e-cigarette. “My friends were using e-cigs,” explains the now 20-year-old California native. “And I’d seen a few commercials on TV and thought they looked pretty cool.” According to a recent survey by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the number of high school students who tried e-cigarettes more than doubled between 2011 and 2012. And it’s no surprise, considering the intense marketing seemingly aimed at teens. “E-cigarette makers are spending millions of dollars on advertising,” says Danny McGoldrick, vice president for

According to a recent survey by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the number of high school students who tried e-cigarettes more than doubled between 2011 and 2012

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e-cigarette, you can easily keep puffing until you consume the whole vial of fluid, which gives you giant doses of nicotine.” No matter how it’s delivered, nicotine is addictive and dangerous. And because e-cigarettes aren’t yet regulated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (though they will likely be soon), the amount of nicotine listed on a cartridge label isn’t always accurate. “Adolescents are more susceptible to the effects of nicotine because they’re still going through critical periods of growth and their brains are developing,” McGoldrick notes. “Research shows that young people can experience symptoms of

Just one cartridge has the nicotine equivalent of several traditional cigarettes dependence—including withdrawal and tolerance—after minimal exposure to nicotine.” That’s why some people fear that e-cigarettes are a gateway to traditional cigarettes and other tobacco products. “Using e-cigs is my way of relaxing,” Audrey says. “I don’t see myself going back to the old kind, but I also don’t know how much healthier e-cigarettes are.” Because they’re a new phenomenon, no one does—and that’s all the more reason to play it safe. —CELIA SHATZMAN

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TEENVOGUE.COM

Prop stylist: Andréa Huelse

research at the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids. At press time there were no legal age limits to buy e-cigarettes in many states, and no federal advertising restrictions— meaning that unlike with real cigarettes, which aren’t allowed to intentionally appeal to young people, makers of the new kind can try to get you interested however they want. From sponsorships at Bonnaroo to celebrity endorsement deals to fun flavors like cherry, vanilla, and peach, e-cigarettes want to be your new best friend. Like many users, Audrey believes she’s healthier since she traded traditional cigarettes for vaping. And the truth is, she might not be wrong. “There’s no question that puff for puff, an e-cigarette is delivering less bad stuff than a cigarette, since it doesn’t contain tar or carbon monoxide,” says Stanton Glantz, Ph.D., a professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, and director of the Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education. “They do, however, contain nicotine, ultrafine particles, volatile organic compounds, and metals.” In other words, even with the cleaner vapors, you can be inhaling tin, lead, and nickel. Electronic cigs are too new for researchers to know what the long-term effects are, but Dr. Glantz cautions that inhaling metals can’t be good for you—period. Not only that, but vaping can pose dangers even beyond smoking the old-fashioned way: Just one cartridge has the nicotine equivalent of several traditional cigarettes. “With regular cigarettes, you smoke one and it goes out,” Dr. Glantz explains, “but with an

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CLOUDED JUDGMENT

E-cigarettes are everywhere, but the facts...not so much.

PHOTOGRAPH AND ARTWORK BY BELA BORSODI.

ELECTRIC YOUTH Everything you need to know about e-cigarettes. WorldMags.net

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ON THE FENCE

Harriet wears a Cheap Monday top, $75. John Rocha printed skirt and tulle underskirt. A vintage jacket from Isabella Blow (on fence). Topshop socks, $12. Vans sneakers, $47. Details, see In This Issue. FASHION EDITORS: ANDREW BEVAN AND HARRIET CHARITY VERNEY.

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FASHION IN THE FAMILY WorldMags.net

MODERN

The late fashion icon Isabella Blow’s rabble-rousing niece, Harriet Charity Verney, is equal parts town and country—and plays entirely by her own eccentric rules. Photographed by Nick Dorey.

TEENVOGUE.COM

English

T

o say Harriet Charity Verney marches to the beat of her own drum is an understatement. In the midst of Britain’s ever-churning (and seemingly endless) pool of ultracool It chicks, this spitfire bon vivant seems more like she’s strutting to the sound of her own electronic orchestra. While her counterparts prefer to follow the leads of more relatable fashion heavyweights Alexa Chung and Cara Delevingne, 21-year-old Harriet’s distinctly throwback joie de vivre recalls a delicious mix of a Brontë heroine, an East London rebel without a cause, and a smart-talking forties dame in one fell swoop. In other words, this Kool-Aid– coiffed old soul’s got gumption—and lots of it. Then again, Harriet is just upholding a familial heritage of free-spirited females. Her adventurer great-grandmother, Lady Vera Delves Broughton, who had been an intrepid traveler since the 1930s, is said to have accidentally taken part in cannibalism while visiting a Papua New Guinea tribe. “She was fearless, ferocious, and outrageous, and she will forever inspire me,” Harriet says. While Great-Grandma may have passed down some of her guts and glory, Harriet—a model, budding stylist, and writer for the likes of Vogue and vogue.com—owes a lot of her moxie to her late aunt, magazine editor (Vogue, British Vogue, Tatler) and global fashion icon Isabella Blow. “My childhood was hysterical. I was climbing trees in Izzy’s oversize wardrobe,” Harriet says of growing up with her aunt at Hilles House in the town of Stroud, a few hours from London. Upon arriving at the manor (think Downton Abbey meets The Royal Tenenbaums), it’s hard not to become enveloped in the folklore of Harriet’s lineage. Intermixed with the requisite coats ➤

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HORSE WHISPERER

Her own vintage Vivienne Westwood corset. Cheap Monday top, $75. Ziad Ghanem skirt. Isabella’s Alexander McQueen– designed Givenchy bird headpiece (a favorite of Harriet’s). Details, see In This Issue.

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FORCE OF NATURE

STEVEN MEISEL/Art + Commerce

Isabella, photographed by Steven Meisel in 1993, wearing a headpiece by her friend Philip Treacy

It’s hard sometimes because of the constant comparisons and the ‘What was she like?’ questions, but she’d love it if she knew WorldMags.net

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BLACK SHEEP

A hand-me-down coat from her aunt. Louis Vuitton top and pants. Philip Treacy headpiece. Details, see In This Issue.

If you move fast enough, no one can catch up with you and tell you what to do of arms and suits of armor is a smattering of couture coats and suits. The grounds are dotted with livestock, most notably a school of black (and only one white) sheep—as if even the animals are modeled after the family’s odd-man-out eccentricity. And while most walls talk, this century-old plaster is screaming. “Izzy wasn’t all fashion week, photo shoot, fashion week. She was incredibly maternal to designers, to friends, to us,” Harriet reminisces of her aunt, who helped launch the careers of Alexander McQueen and other burgeoning designers, and who became the muse for many, including famed mad hatter Philip Treacy. “In the nineties there was something in the air in England—the YBA [Young British Artists] movement, magazines like The Face, and people like Izzy—cool Britannia! Even us country folk felt it.” The current London exhibition Isabella Blow: Fashion Galore!, which celebrates the iconoclast’s life and wardrobe, has not only proved her continued influence on designers and style icons (Lady Gaga, anyone?), but it’s caused many to see similarities between Harriet and her beloved patron aunt of fashion. “It’s hard sometimes because of the constant comparisons and the ‘What was she like?’ questions, but she’d love it if she knew!” divulges Harriet, who began her career in the industry interning for Alexander McQueen when she was just 16. “It was my first taste of London,” she says. “Being around those clothes was amazing. I dressed up every day for him!” Harriet, who cites Hula-Hooping as part of her daily routine (and I actually believe her), hasn’t stopped playing dress-up, which is why this editor was happy to share the

styling reins with her on our shoot. “Izzy would always stress that it’s all about silhouettes. I love craft and structure and clothes that fit,” the self-proclaimed sartorial hoarder explains. “I’ve gone from wearing nu-rave fluorescent pink Adidas tracksuits to rah-rah skirts and Ralph Lauren to full tartan looks. Now I’m wearing lots Isabella in a Philip of very masculine woolen suits with ridiculous Treacy hat Victorian collared shirts.” Much like Isabella, Harriet also has a keen interest in fostering young London designers. “It’s hunger and greed for something new to bite into,” she says. “Something new to wear or different to talk about. An incredible piece of clothing is a conversation starter that cuts out small talk, thank God!” Yet chitchat seems to be a strong suit for this charmer, who mentions that she’s never been the bad girl—just one who goes against the grain. “My school was for girls who wanted to become ‘the wives of...’ and I was like, ‘No, thanks!’” Such self-assurance has helped Harriet start to forge her own path on the London scene, where everyone has an opinion about how one should stand out. “Feigning confidence is what makes you the most confident,” she reveals. “I think that if you move fast enough, no one can catch up with you and tell you what to do.” To which we say: Full speed ahead! —ANDREW BEVAN

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Inset: STEVE SPILLER/WENN/Newscom

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QUEEN BEE

A jacket from Isabella. Maticevski gown. Vivienne Westwood crown. Vicki Sarge necklace. In this story: hair, Nicole Kahlani at The Book Agency; makeup, Danielle Kahlani at The Book Agency.

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WorldMags.net AFRO BELLA To max out a naturally voluminous texture, hairstylist James Pecis suggests “giving your hair a little back-comb at the roots.” Pro trick: “It’s best done from behind your part so the teased portion doesn’t show.” Polish off the look with a shine spray—try Moroccanoil Glimmer Shine. Nur wears a Louis Vuitton jacket. Michael Michael Kors jumpsuit. On both wrists: Susan Alexandra cuffs, $225 each. Details, see In This Issue.

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WorldMags.net Backstage pro James Pecis takes

hair to dramatic new heights. Photographed by Jason Kibbler.

THE PILEUP

For full-on volume, Pecis recommends doing three key things: Blow-dry hair with a volumizing mousse from roots to ends (we love Tresemmé 24 Hour Body Foaming Mousse), sprinkle roots with dry shampoo (try Bumble and Bumble Prêt-à-Powder), and then tease the crown for even more lift. FASHION EDITOR: MICHELLE CAMERON. TEENVOGUE.COM

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PORTRAIT OF A LADY

Turn an ordinary updo on its head with Pecis’s secret weapon. “I love using texture sprays to keep the hair light and full of life,” he says. For touchable volume like Clodelle’s, try L’Oréal Paris Advanced Hairstyle TXT It Tousle Waves Spray. Details, see In This Issue.

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GRAVITY DEFYING

“Sometimes you need to set hair so it won’t move in a storm,” notes Pecis. For everyday styles, however, he recommends a flexible-hold spray that you can “brush out to change up your look.” Try Living Proof Flex Shaping Hairspray—flip your head over and blow-dry hair straight up for extra lift. Kate Spade New York capris (around shoulders), $258.

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CLUB KID

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Braids, colored hair bands, and faux bangs—oh, my! Pecis’s inspiration? Afropunk Fest, Brooklyn’s cult summer music festival. “The energy of the youth culture and the diversity is mind-blowing,” he says. “There is also a slight nineties feel of rebellion and independence that influenced my work backstage.” Prada dress. On left ear: H&M metal ear cuff, $5 per pair. Details, see In This Issue.

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TWISTED SISTER

“Product buildup, natural oil, and even mineral deposits from the water in your shower can weigh down your hair and keep it from its full-volume potential,” Pecis says. Get a clean slate by using a clarifying shampoo, like Fekkai Apple Cider Shampoo, once a week. “Keeping conditioner off your scalp and roots also helps immensely,” he says. In this story: hair, James Pecis, Instagram @jamespecis; makeup, Ralph Siciliano, Instagram @ralphsiciliano; nails, Mar y Soul for Cloutier Remix.

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In This Issue

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ON THE COVER Michael Michael Kors shirt, $100. Select Michael Kors stores. Mokuba ribbon (worn in hair), $4 per yard. Mokuba, NYC.

de Parfum, $64 for 1.7 oz. Sephora. Elizabeth and James Nirvana White Eau de Parfum, $75 for 1.7 oz. Sephora. Calvin Klein Endless Euphoria Eau de Parfum, $89 for 4.2 oz. Macy’s.

COVER LOOK 58: On the cover: Shirt, select Michael Kors stores. Ribbon (worn in hair), Mokuba, NYC. At right: Dress, burberry.com. Bralette, loverthelabel .com. Necklace, dogeared.com. Charm, similar styles at lulufrost.com.

IN THE GAME 124–125: Dress, and top, $980. prada.com. Visor, select DKNY stores. Gillian Steinhardt earrings, $45. gilliansteinhardtjewelry.com. On right wrist: Black cuff, (212) 245-7396. Green bracelet, toga.jp. Pouch, Proenza Schouler, NYC. On left wrist: Yellow and black bracelets, (212) 2457396. Medallion cuff, select Neiman Marcus stores. Ring, shopbop.com. 126: Tee, Opening Ceremony, NYC. Blouse, price upon request. thakoon.com. Skirt, $1,005. Colette, Paris. Gillian Steinhardt earrings, $45. gilliansteinhardtjewelry .com. Necklace, $630. atelierswarovski.com. On right wrist: Bangle, Issey Miyake, NYC. VPL for Charming Charlie ring, $12. vplnyc.com. Clutch, jeremyscott .com. On left wrist: Cuff, $490. mitchelprimrose .com. Fallon ring, $160. fallonjewelry.com. Shoes, $595. Saks Fifth Avenue. 127: Red dress, $499. (212) 223-1824. Tank, stolengirlfriendsclub.com. Culottes, $750, and striped pants, $620. muleh.com. Large metal collar, $455. Joseph, NYC. Necklace, atelierswarovski.com. On both wrists: Wristbands, $630 each. sacai.jp. Shoes, $870. marni.com. 128: Top, $1,279. oxygeneboutique.com. Long-sleeve tee, Opening Ceremony, NYC. Skirt, $745. Opening Ceremony, NYC. Cap, adidas.com. Gillian Steinhardt earrings, $45. gilliansteinhardtjewelry.com. Sacai necklace, $300. sacai.jp. Pouch, price upon request. Opening Ceremony, NYC. Trina Turk ring, $75. trinaturk.com. Sneakers, select DKNY stores. 129: Dress, net-a-porter.com. Bralette, becandbridge.com .au. Leggings, select Louis Vuitton stores. Necklace, bond-hardware.com. Bag, furla. com. Bracelet, $1,8 00. Select Prada boutiques. Vita Fede ring, $315. vitafede .com. 130: Top, $675. Barneys New York. White shirt, Neiman Marcus. Skirt, (803) 773-2821. Sacai necklace, $300. sacai.jp. Bag, $975. 31philliplim .com. Belt, toga.jp. Eddie Borgo ring, $225. saks .com. Socks, select Prada boutiques. Shoes, $830. marni.com. 131: Dress, Ikram, Chicago. Sacai belt, price upon request. sacai.jp. Cap, $600. (888) 5636858. Alexis Bittar earrings, $95. alexisbittar.com. Bracelet, Bergdorf Goodman, NYC. Clutch, $498. (212) 988-0259. Prada socks, $315. Select Prada boutiques. Sandals, $542. Opening Ceremony, NYC.

CONTRIBUTORS 72: On Harriet: Tiger Chadwick jacket, price upon request. [email protected]. DSquared2 shirt, $1,070. Select Saks Fifth Avenue stores. Philosophy by Natalie Ratabesi pants, $595. Bloomingdale’s. Louis Vuitton tiara, price upon request. louisvuitton .com. Meadham Kirchhoff for Topshop socks, similar styles at topshop.com. Simone Rocha sandals, $740. Dover Street Market, NYC. TRENDING 74: iPhone, apple.com. Wallet, (212) 604-9200. FASHION AT WORK 76: Verameat ring, $48. verameat.com. Candamill tote, $1,311. candamill.com. 78: Bottom left: Chanel loafers, $1,595. Select Chanel boutiques. OLD SCHOOL 80: Tee and shoes, Opening Ceremony, NYC. Tank, select Neiman Marcus stores. Skirt, mpatmos.com. Visor, store.y-3.com. Her own earrings. Elizabeth and James bag, $595. shopbop.com. Socks, nike.com. 82: Top right: On Jane: Dress, $1,150. Sportmax, NYC. Gemma Redux bracelets, $223 for set of six. gemmaredux.com. Sandals, topshop.com. On Harley: Dress, similar styles at nordstrom.com. France Luxe headband, $28. franceluxe.com. Catbird necklace, $298. catbirdnyc.com. Cuff, $550. Tom Binns Megastore, NYC. Sandals, topshop.com. Bottom left: Bralette, nastygal.com. Dress, select Bloomingdale’s stores. Jersey, scotch-soda.com. L. Erickson barrette, $26. franceluxe.com. LeSportsac backpack, $138. Similar styles at lesportsac.com. On right wrist, from left: Cooee cuff, $54. cooee.se. Dinosaur Designs bangle, $90. dinosaurdesigns.com. On left wrist, from top: Orly Genger by Jaclyn Mayer bracelet, $125. P.45, Chicago. Faux/Real bracelet, $145. Creatures of Comfort, L.A. Dinosaur Designs bangles, $75 each. dinosaurdesigns.com. American Apparel socks, $10. americanapparel.com. Sandals, similar styles at Calvin Klein Collection, NYC. MY WORLD 84: Chanel Rouge Coco Hydrating Crème Lip Colour, $34. chanel.com. 87: A California Childhood, $23. amazon.com. SPRING FORWARD 105: Key chains by Mary Kate Steinmiller. COMIC TRIP 106: Sweatshirt, beanie, and backpack, therodnikband .com. Jeans and earrings, topshop.com. AUSSIE IN WONDERLAND 111: Dress, $498. Marc by Marc Jacobs stores. Handbag, Barneys New York. MF by Meghan Farrell ring, $295. Opening Ceremony, NYC. 112: Crop top, Intermix. Skirt, Red Valentino, San Francisco. Bianca Pratt Jewelry necklace, $875. biancaprattjewelry .com. Kelly Wearstler cuff, $195. kellywearstler.com. Shoes, $625. Jimmy Choo, NYC. MASTER CLASS 118: Dolce & Gabbana Dolce Eau de Parfum, $90 for 1.7 oz. Sephora. Reiss Grey Flower Eau de Parfum, $85 for 3.4 oz. Reiss stores. Aerin Lilac Path Eau de Parfum, $110 for 1.7 oz. esteelauder .com. Gucci Flora 1966 Eau de Parfum, $200 for 3.3 oz. sephora.com. Kenzo Couleur Yellow Eau 166

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SPRING AWAKENING 132–133: Dress, A.P.C., NYC. Ribbon (worn in hair), Mokuba, NYC. Ring, catbirdnyc.com. 134: On Jonathan: Sweater, A.P.C., NYC. Shorts, $525. Calvin Klein Collection, NYC. Shoes, $485. burberry.com. On Lea: Dress, $548. Bloomingdale’s. Cult Gaia headband, $75. cultgaia.com. Dogeared necklace, $54. dogeared.com. Lulu Frost charm, similar styles at lulufrost.com. Flats, ae.com. 135: Dress, asos .com. Slip, horsesatelier.com. Necklace (worn as headband), ae.com. Bracelet, houseoflavande .com. 136–137: On Jonathan: Shirt, $595, and shoes, $485. burberry.com. Shorts, $525. Calvin Klein Collection, NYC. On Lea: Sweater, loft.com. Dress, guess.com. Headband, cultgaia.com. Ring, catbirdnyc.com. Necklace, dogeared.com. Charm, similar styles at lulufrost.com. 139: Peacoat, $695. Red Valentino boutiques. Dress, asos.com. Necklace (worn as headband), ae.com. House of Lavande bracelet, $348. houseoflavande.com. BOOT CAMP 14 0–141: Jumpsuit, joesjeans.com. Tee, bleuclothing.com. Sweatshirt (around waist), (310) 230-8882. Coat (on chair), carhartt.com. Stylist’s own hat. Kaufman’s Army & Navy belt (worn on arm), $12. Kaufman’s Army & Navy, NYC. Socks, llbean.com. Shoes, drmartens.com. 142: Overalls, ae.com. Shirt, currentelliott.com. Cap, lids.com. Socks, llbean.com. Sneakers, nike

.com. 143: Sweater, $460. Theory stores. Shorts, citizensofhumanity.com. Beanie, racketparis .com. On shoulder: Bag, hermes.com. Belt, If, NYC. Socks, llbean.com. Model’s own Topshop boots. 144: Shirt, saksfifthavenue.com. T-shirt, uswings.com. Pants, rebeccataylor.com. Cap, lids.com. Belt, Kaufman’s Army & Navy, NYC. 145: Sweatshirt, Isabel Marant, NYC. Shorts with belt, zappos.com. Jacket (around waist), hyeparkandlune.com. ’47 Brand cap, $22. lids .com. Kaufman’s Army & Navy belt (on right shoulder), $12. Kaufman’s Army & Navy, NYC. 146: Shirt, select DKNY stores. Tee, express .com. Jeans, bloomingdales.com. Hat, pr@ albertusswanepoel.com. On right shoulder: Backpack, price upon request. Select Chanel boutiques. 147: Jacket, (212) 223-1824. Pants, similar styles at (212) 223-1824. Beanie, lids .com. On left shoulder: Belt, $995. Donna Karan New York. Belt, Kaufman’s Army & Navy, NYC. Socks, wigwam.com. Boots, clarksusa.com. AMAZING GRACE 148–149: On Misty: Crop top, jackhenrynewyork .com. Sports bra, americanapparel.com. Her own tutu and pointe shoes. On girls: International Dance Supplies leotards, $40 each. danceandshop.com. Their own hosiery and pointe shoes. 150: Jacket, $1,440. bessnyc.com. Unitard, livetheprocess.com. Her own pointe shoes. MODERN ENGLISH 154–155: Top, cheapmonday.com. Printed skirt, price upon request, and tulle underskirt, $645. johnrocha.ie. Vicki Sarge earrings, $712. vickisarge .com. Socks, topshop.com. Sneakers, vans.com. 156: Top, cheapmonday.com. Skirt, made to order. [email protected]. 158: Top, $670, and pants, $810. Select Louis Vuitton stores. Headpiece, price upon request. philiptreacy.co.uk. 159: Gown, $1,840. avenue32.com. Crown, Vivienne Westwood Gold Label, Bridal and Couture, London. Necklace, $1,405. vickisarge.com.

BIG LOVE 160: Jacket, price upon request. Select Louis Vuitton stores. Jumpsuit, similar styles at select Michael Kors stores. Opening Ceremony shorts, $315. Opening Ceremony, NYC. L. Erickson hair clip, $54. franceluxe .com. On both wrists: Cuffs, susanalexandra.com. 161: Hood By Air jeans (on shoulder), $685. hoodbyair .com. Guess dress, $98. bloomingdales.com. 162: Burlington pants (on shoulders), $25. burlingtoncoatfactory.com. Christopher Kane top, $1,605. Similar styles at Opening Ceremony, NYC. R.J. Graziano necklace, $50. rjgraziano .com. 163: Capris (around shoulders), katespade .com. Opening Ceremony sweatshirt, $185. Opening Ceremony, NYC. D. Efect pants (on arms), similar styles at Brooklyn Fox, NYC. L. Erickson hair clips, $26 each. franceluxe.com. Alexis Bittar earring, $245 per pair. alexisbittar.com. Josie Natori necklace, $325. natori.com. 164: Jeremy Scott for Adidas shorts (on shoulders), $80. adidas .com. Dress, prada.com. Echo Design scarf (worn as headband), $48. echodesign.com. On right ear: Claire’s neon stud earring, $20 for set of 20. Select Claire’s stores. Dinosaur Designs hoop earring, $95 per pair. dinosaurdesigns.com. On left ear: Ear cuff, hm.com. Claire’s neon stud earring, $20 for set of 20. Select Claire’s stores. R.J. Graziano blue earring, $25 per pair. rjgraziano.com. 165: Toga top, $446. Opening Ceremony, NYC. Kenzo pants (on arms), $740. openingceremony.us. Claire’s hoop earrings, $9. claires.com. SNAPSHOT 168: Top, $150. Intermix. Skirt, $325. cynthiarowley .com. Belt, $44. bebe.com. Falke socks, $22. freshpair .com. Boots, $398. modernvice.com. Bottom left: Her own earrings. ALL PRICES APPROXIMATE.

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TEENVOGUE.COM

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SPRING AWAKENING continued from ➤ 138

Cory and I were very involved in the Chrysalis organization, which is about trying to get people jobs. We went to a lot of its events. He actually got me involved in the first place, so I’m continuing on with it. JG: Which one of your peers empowers you the most? LM: Jennifer Lawrence, who is outspoken, beautiful, and comfortable with herself. I love her. There are lots of really brave, awesome girls in this business right now. JG: You have your album coming out; your book, Brunette Ambition, being released; and one more season of Glee. What do you want beyond that? LM: I want to do movies. I have some exciting things coming up! And I would love to go back to Broadway. Ryan Murphy just got the rights to Funny Girl, so we’re hoping to do that at some point. JG: What about personally? LM: I don’t think I can really answer that question because right now I’m focusing on my job and taking care of myself. Maybe in a little while I’ll be like, What do I want? But I’m not quite there yet. JG: Now I have a double question: What’s the one place you’ve been to that everyone should visit, and what’s the one place you’re dying to go to where you’ve never been? LM: The one place I’ve been to that everyone should go to is Rome. JG: Why is that? LM: Because it’s my people! And the one place I’ve always wanted to go is Bali. We were supposed to visit Ryan Murphy there when he was filming Eat Pray Love. JG: But then you had to do a mall tour. [Laughs] Do you feel pressure to go out and be a part of the Hollywood scene? LM: No way. I love my house. I’ve made it a sanctuary for a reason. It’s my place where I can recover and heal and

be good so the next day I can sing. I have to remind myself to add in that social time because if it were up to me, I’d be at home with The Real Housewives of Atlanta,!The!Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, The Real Housewives of Miami,!Shahs of Sunset,!Top Chef, Homeland,!Revenge, and Scandal all the time. JG: You know your friends will come over and watch those shows with you whenever you want. LM: The way my friends have been there for me lately is remarkable. When we were at Cory’s memorial at the Paramount lot, you and I were the last ones to walk in, and I saw two rows of my close friends and family. The entire row behind us was all my girlfriends—the most strong, beautiful women. You would have thought they looked like a— JG: A force. LM: They were all stunning—a whole row of them. A force of women who stood behind me and were there for me. I am so thankful for them. JG: You know we’re all here for you. LM: I’ve never had a best friend like you. I never had the person who’s the person. The person you call, the person who’s there, the person who gets you, the person who makes you laugh. You know, that person. JG: I never had that, either. LM: Also, being an only child, I didn’t have a sibling to go to if something was wrong. In high school it was the other people who were so close and inseparable. If someone had to be chopped off the friend list, it would most certainly be me. And with you, for the first time, I feel like I’m number one on the list. You are my first best friend. There is such relief when you’re with the person who gets you the most.

TEEN VOGUE IS A REGISTERED TRADEMARK OF ADVANCE MAGAZINE PUBLISHERS INC. COPYRIGHT © 2014 CONDÉ NAST. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. PRINTED IN THE U.S.A. VOLUME 14, NO. 2. TEEN VOGUE (ISSN 1540-2215) is published monthly (except for combined issues in December/January and June/ July) by Condé Nast, which is a division of Advance Magazine Publishers Inc. PRINCIPAL OFFICE: The Condé Nast Building, 4 Times Square, New York, NY 10036. S. I. Newhouse, Jr., Chairman; Charles H. Townsend, Chief Executive Officer; Robert A. Sauerberg, Jr., President; John W. Bellando, Chief Operating Officer & Chief Financial Officer; Jill Bright, Chief Administrative Officer. Periodicals postage paid at New York, NY, and at additional mailing offices. Canada Post Publications Mail Agreement No. 40644503. Canadian Goods and Services Tax Registration No. 123242885-RT0001. Canada Post: Return undeliverable Canadian addresses to P.O. Box 874, Station Main, Markham, ON L3P 8L4. POSTMASTER: Send all UAA to CFS (SEE DMM 707.4.12.5); NON-POSTAL AND MILITARY FACILITIES: Send address corrections to TEEN VOGUE, P.O. Box 37730, Boone, IA 50037-0730. FOR SUBSCRIPTIONS, ADDRESS CHANGES, ADJUSTMENTS, OR BACK ISSUE INQUIRIES: Please write to Teen Vogue, P.O. Box 37730, Boone, IA 50037-0730, call (800) 274-0084, or e-mail [email protected]. Please give both new and old addresses as printed on most recent label. Subscribers: If the Post Office alerts us that your magazine is undeliverable, we have no further obligation unless we receive a corrected address within one year. If during your subscription term or up to one year after the magazine becomes undeliverable, you are ever dissatisfied with your subscription, let us know. You will receive a full refund on all unmailed issues. First copy of new subscription will be mailed within eight weeks after receipt of order. Address all editorial, business, and production correspondence to Teen Vogue magazine, 4 Times Square, New York, NY 10036. For reprints, please e-mail [email protected] or call (717) 505-9701, ext. 101. For reuse permissions, please e-mail permissions@condenast .com or call (800) 897-8666. Visit us online at teenvogue.com. To subscribe to other Condé Nast magazines on the World Wide Web, visit condenastdigital .com. Occasionally, we make our subscriber list available to carefully screened companies that offer products and services that we believe would interest our readers. If you do not want to receive these offers and/or information, please advise us at P.O. Box 37730, Boone, IA 50037-0730, or call (800) 274-0084. TEEN VOGUE IS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR THE RETURN OR LOSS OF, OR FOR DAMAGE OR ANY OTHER INJURY TO, UNSOLICITED MANUSCRIPTS, UNSOLICITED ART WORK (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, DRAWINGS, PHOTOGRAPHS, AND TRANSPARENCIES), OR ANY OTHER UNSOLICITED MATERIALS. THOSE SUBMITTING MANUSCRIPTS, PHOTOGRAPHS, ARTWORK, OR OTHER MATERIALS FOR CONSIDERATION SHOULD NOT SEND ORIGINALS, UNLESS SPECIFICALLY REQUESTED TO DO SO BY TEEN VOGUE IN WRITING. MANUSCRIPTS, PHOTOGRAPHS, AND OTHER MATERIALS SUBMITTED MUST BE ACCOMPANIED BY A SELF-ADDRESSED STAMPED ENVELOPE.

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Last Look FREE REIN

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Coco with Polo, one of her horses, at her family’s farm in Oxfordshire.

COCO BROOKS

The New York CityÐbred equestrienne talks style and moving to the English countryside.

age 12 what she’s wearing “A Rag & Bone top, a Cynthia Rowley skirt, a Bebe belt, and Natalie & Dylana Suarez x Modern Vice boots.” basic instinct “My style is casual—80 percent tomboy and 20 percent girly. I don’t like to bring too much attention to myself. I’m too young to wear a lot of designer clothes, but I like Topshop, Jack Wills, and Comme des Garçons Play x Converse—their high-top sneakers are my favorite! Being in the countryside, no one pressures you about the way you look, so I like to mix pieces that are easy to wear with things that I love just because.” the simple life “What I like most about living on our farm is that there is always plenty to do, including hanging out in the tree house, taking apples to the pigs, or horseback riding. In the springtime the light is really beautiful, and I can see everything come into bloom.” two of a kind “My mom [fashion consultant and writer Amanda Brooks] is really helpful when it comes to fashion advice. She gives me great handme-downs. I borrow a lot of her shoes because she has quite small feet—and I don’t have that long before mine are bigger than hers!” pony club “When I was little, I wanted to be a famous rider. As I’ve gotten older, I’ve become interested in new things, especially since moving to England from New York City. I like the sound of a stylist’s job, but I also have interests outside of fashion, like art.”

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Fashion Stylist: Amanda Brooks; hair, Susi Lichtenegger using Bumble and Bumble; makeup, Celia Burton at CLM Hair & Makeup. Details, see In This Issue.

PHOTOGRAPHED BY SEAN THOMAS.

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