About Fashion Magazine Issue N°1

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ABOUT FASHION N°1

MAGAZINE

the birth 1 issue s e p t . 2 0 1 6


ABOUT FASHION N°1

MAGAZINE

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ABOUT FASHION MAGAZINE

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the birth issue s e p t . 2 0 1 6


letter from the

Editor

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Where to start? We are at the beginning of a “I have no idea where it is going to bring me� journey and it is so amazing. During this few months since aboutfashionmag.com went live I realized how many talented and beautiful people we have out there believing in what we do. We received lots of messages from all over the world and you demonstrated us that all of this is worth every minute

of our time because you are here to support us and we will not disappoint you. We created a collection of alluring works, raw and colorful stories, along with inspiring interviews with designers and artists. Thanks to you our first issue is here and it’s alive and we really really hope that it will make your eyes and heart feel as satisfied as ours while you browse it.

Editor in Chief

Ilaria Taschini

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6 THERE SILENTLY

editorial by Lydia Gorges & Jens Schmidt

24 STUDIO IMPERFETTO

editorial by Camilla Glorioso

32 FROM DUSK TILL DAWN editorial by Ilaria Taschini

50 WANDERING STAR

editorial by Gaia Bonanomi

66 AFTER THE SWEET CRAVING editorial by Lotus & datou

78 MATTER OF INTIMACY

editorial by Arianna Airoldi

92 RECOGNIZER

editorial by Louise Thornfeldt

102 YOU SHOOK ME

editorial by Manuela Iodice

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DON’T LEAVE ME HERE editorial by Ilaria Taschini

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EDGELANDS editorial by Sophia Weston

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COLORS OF F/W 2017 article by Karolina Gendek-D’Andrea

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IMPERFECT IS PERFECT article by Karolina Gendek-D’Andrea

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YOU ARE BORING ME article by Karolina Gendek-D’Andrea

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THE B. BY FEDERICO BARRAZZO interview with Federico Barrazzo

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VOODOO JEWELS interview with Livia Lazzari

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REBECCA COLTORTI interview with Rebecca Coltorti

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EDITORIAL

There Silently

photography LYDIA GORGES & JENS SCHMIDT styling SASKIA SCHMIDT model LINA @ HEARTBREAK MGMT make up & hair SINA VELKE

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shirt VETEMENTS, jacket JAROW seen @ ÈCOLE BOUTIQUE, trousers VLADIMIR KARALEEV, belt JIL SANDER VINTAGE


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shirt VETEMENTS jacket JAROW seen @

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ÈCOLE BOUTIQUE trousers VLADIMIR KARALEEV, belt JIL SANDER VINTAGE


jacket VETEMENTS, body

LOVE STORIES INTIMATES, necklace SABRINA DEHOFF, socks NIKE

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jacket VETEMENTS, body LOVE STORIES INTIMATES, necklace SABRINA DEHOFF, socks NIKE

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jacket ACNE STUDIOS, shirt LEVI’S, bra MOSCHINO, skirt MIU MIU, necklace SABRINA DEHOFF


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jacket SAINT LAURENT dress PRADA, bra &OTHER STORIES, shoes MIU MIU

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jacket TOM FORD, shorts LEVI’S

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hoodie VETEMENTS, white zip UPWEEKDAYS

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EDITORIAL

Studio Imperfetto

photography CAMILLA GLORIOSO styling MIRRA ELISABET WESNESKI model DINA @ M+P MODELS make up JINNY KIM photo assistant MEIKE LINTHORST

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shirt NAYA REA

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top AQ/AQ, skirt LE KILT, earrings VIVIENNE WESTWOOD, necklace ALEXIA JORDAN, shoes JEFFREY CAMPBELL

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top SHAO YEN

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dress OMER ASIM, 30 ring MIANSAI


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EDITORIAL

From Dusk Till Dawn photography ILARIA TASCHINI styling GINEVRA S. MENON model IVA @ THE FABBRICA make up & hair GIOVANNA FUCCIOLO photo assistant NOEMI DE LUCA special thanks to STUDIO 144

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unitard BONES, skirt ASOS, belt THE B., choker DISSIDIA COUTURE


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unitard BONES skirt ASOS belt THE B. choker DISSID-

IA COUTURE

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top LOST INK, trousers THE B., belt THE B., choker DISSIDIA COUTURE


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top & trousers THE B. chokers & bracelets

DISSIDIA COUTURE

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top THE B., dress

RECLAIMED VINTAGE skirt TRUE VIOLET choker DISSIDIA COUTURE, shoes PUBLIC DESIRE

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top THE B., dress RECLAIMED VINTAGE, choker DISSIDIA COUTURE


top ASOS, trousers ASOS, 44 choker DISSIDIA COUTURE


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dress & belt THE B. choker DISSIDIA COUTURE

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top ASOS, trousers ASOS, choker DISSIDIA COUTURE

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dress & belt THE B. shoes PUBLIC DESIRE choker DISSIDIA COUTURE

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EDITORIAL

Wandering Star

photography GAIA BONANOMI styling FRANCESCO MIGLIACCIO model SIGRID @ WAVE MGMT make up & hair JESSICA RONGAROLI

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dress MIAHATAMI, pants NESS, socks PRADA


dress MIAHATAMI, 52 pants NESS


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top MIAHATAMI shirt JUST CAVALLI skirt TRELL, socks PRADA, shoes ZARA


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top MIAHATAMI, pants LOEWE, 56 socks PRADA, shoes ZARA


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shirt SISLEY, corset ILARY, pants MIAHATAMI

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coat (left) FRANCESCA FERRANTE coat (right) ROMEO GIGLI, top ENVIE, shirt PHILOSOPHY BY ALBERTA FERRETTI, skirt TO BE, socks PRADA

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top MOSCHINO pants MIAHATAMI socks PRADA shoes ZARA

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top MIAHATAMI, skirt 3SUISSES

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EDITORIAL

After The Sweet Craving photography LOTUS & DATOU styling MANCHIT model JULIA SIBI SIBILA make up & hair JOGO STUDIO all clothes TUDOO

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EDITORIAL

Matter Of Intimacy photography ARIANNA AIROLDI styling FRANCESCA MARTORELLI & RAFAELA RUSCA models EMMA @ MP MGMT RIQUELLE @ WONDERWALL make up & hair FRANCESCA MEZZOLI & LUISA ARNONE

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dress ELISA BIROLI, belt IVORIES


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dress ELISA BIROLI, belt IVORIES

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coat SHIRTAPORTER, black body DAIQUIRI LIME, socks sarah borghi

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Riquelle wears, blouse RICK LEE, dress GAZEL Emma wears, top GALL DONNA, skirt RICK LEE necklace DESIGN DIGEST

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Riquelle wears, denim skirt REIKO, red skirt OTTO D’AME Emma wears, top OTTO 86D’AME, denim REIKO


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coat SALVATORE SANTORO, earrings GIULIA BARELA JEWELRY

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Riquelle wears, shirt LUCA SCIASCIA, jeans ELISA BIROLI, necklace DIVA GIOIELLI Emma wears, top DEPARTMENT 5, skirt ELISA BIROLI, earrings DIVA GIOIELLI

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top MARIOS 90


jacket ANDREA, necklace DESIGN DIGEST

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EDITORIAL

Recognizer

photography & styling LOUISE THORNFELDT model MARIA @ LE MANAGEMENT

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shirt VINTAGE, shirt ZARA


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shirt VINTAGE, pants ZARA


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total look VINTAGE

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white shirt VINTAGE, sleeve-less shirt VINTAGE, pants ZARA


shirt &OTHERSTORIES, pants ZARA, shoes STYLIST OWN

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EDITORIAL

You Shook Me

photography MANUELA IODICE styling KAROLINA GENDEK-D’ANDREA model KATE P. @ NEXT MODELS MILAN make up & hair ROBERTA CAMPONESCHI photo assistant LISA MINU PEPE style assistant MARIA ELENA MELONI

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bralet & vest GIORGIA PAPARCONE, trousers GIUSEPPE D’ANDREA, shoes ZARA


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bralet & vest GIORGIA PAPARCONE, trousers GIUSEPPE D’ANDREA, shoes ZARA

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coat MARTA COCCO dress THE B., shoes STYLIST OWN, tights CALZEDONIA

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shirt GIUSEPPE BONAFEDE, turtleneck MARTA COCCO, belt & trousers THE B., shoes ZARA, tights CALZEDONIA

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coat & bag QUATTROMANI, jumpsuit GHOST BY VALERIA IZZO, shoes ZARA

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blouse PRISCILLA ARRESTI,112 trousers AMERICAN APPAREL


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EDITORIAL

Don’t Leave Me Here photography ILARIA TASCHINI styling KAROLINA GENDEK-D’ANDREA model ALI @ MONSTER MGMT make up & hair ROBERTA CAMPONESCHI photo assistant GIANLUCA MARROZZINI style assistant MARIA ELENA MELONI

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coat THE B., top AMERICAN APPAREL, skirt FEDERICA TOSI, belt THE B.


bomber

STYLIST OWN trousers, tunic & bag THE B.

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bomber CARLOTTA FOIS, jeans AROUND, shoes BUFFALO, bag QUATTROMANI

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dress & shirt QUATTROMANI, bag THE B., shoes STYLIST OWN

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jacket FEDERICA TOSI, dress THE B.


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denim jumper

AROUND

bomber

GIULIA MARTINELLI belt THE B.

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blouse FEDERICA TOSI, skirt CRISTINA SQUARCIA, belt STYLIST OWN

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EDITORIAL

Edgelands

photography SOPHIA WESTON styling ANDREEA RADOI model MADDIE @ THE HIVE hair PASCAL LOMBARDO retouch DAVID POLLARD assistant SAMANTHA WHEELWRIGHT

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shirt HAAL, dress HAIZHEN WANG


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shirt HAAL dress HAIZHEN WANG, bodysuit JAMES KELLY socks NIKE shoes ADIDAS

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top PRINGLE OF SCOTLAND

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total look HAIZHEN WANG


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total look HAIZHEN WANG

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jacket JAMES KELLY, skirt CALVIN KLEIN

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top CALVIN KLEIN skirt J JS LEE

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jumper JAMIE WEI HUANG, skirt CALVIN KLEIN, green top JAMES KELLY, boots TOPSHOP UNIQUE

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jumper HAAL, culottes PRINGLE OF SCOTLAND

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article

Colors of f/w 2017

Kenzo

words KAROLINA GENDEK D’ANDREA images courtesy of WGSN.COM

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ACNE Studios

September. Back to school, back to work, back to daily routines and‌. back to infinite shopping sprees. Color is the key in choosing the trendy looks for the new season. Apart from the winter ever-green black, designers propose some interesting hues. Here follow the colors we will be wearing next Fall Winter 2017.

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BLACK

Lanvin

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Alexander McQueen Gareth Pugh

Preen by Thorton Bregazzi

Nothing new. Black is the always present best friend of every fashionista. But don’t forget to play with textures while choosing it: lace, tulle, velvet, sequins‌ the possibilities are endless. Preen by Thorton Bregazzi chose transparencies, Lanvin with vinyl coats, Bottega Veneta with velvet , fur sleeves for Gareth Pugh and adorned with brooches for Alexander McQueen.

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PINK

Prada

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Gucci Fendi

Comme des Garçons

This seasons shade of pink is not baby-doll style. It is muted, sexy and chic. From Prada’s pretty in pink print and Jil Sander’s lamé dress, to all-over at Gucci; whether blush rose or bright magenta, pink has been a strong feature on the Fall/Winter 2016-2017 catwalks.

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GREEN

Prada

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Burberry Pringle of Scotland

Prada

Another typical winter shade. The runway looks sported mainly wood green and the tones remained dark. Seen in Burberry Prorsum, Prada and Pringle of Scotland

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LILIAC

Kenzo

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Miu Miu Kenzo

Wanda Nylon

Super bright, feminine and uplifting, lilac might be the the most difficult fall/ winter 2016-2017 color. Wearing it during all those rainy, gloomy and frosty days might be tricky, unless you live in sunsoaked cities like LA. If you dare to try check collections from Wanda Nylon, Kenzo, Miu Miu, Michael Kors, Roberto Cavalli and Tod’s.

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RED

ACNE Studios

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ACNE Studios Balenciaga

Balenciaga

A bold color that will never make you go unnoticed. It’s not as tricky as bright violet. You can try a total look as seen on the catwalks of ACNE Studios, Balenciaga, Junya Watanabe, Saint Laurent and Comme des Garçons.

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YELLOW

Rodarte

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Arthur Arbesser Arthur Arbesser

Emilio Pucci

Spicy Mustard is another daring option for this season. Adding a slightly spicy flavor to you look might be the right move to brighten up this fall. You can choose from all different styles from Arthur Arbesser, Emilio Pucci and 3.1 Phillip Lim, Roberto Cavalli and Jenny Packham, Rodarte, Sportmax, Acne Studios, Gucci, Fendi, Balenciaga, Max Mara and Marc Jacobs.

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article

Imperfect is Perfect words KAROLINA GENDEK-D’ANDREA

Raw authenticity is what we are looking for after years of over-sexualization and editing. Twenty-five years ago Kurt Cobain sang “Come as you are, as you were” – the message that after all this years still has a certain effect on the new generation. Generation Z is leading a new path of social acceptance for all things strange, imperfect and socially rejected. After recent years obsessed with editing the reality, altering the imperfect appearance, filtering the truth, it looks like the society is looking for true and unaltered life.

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image by Nicolò Bagnati, photographer / i-D Magazine

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image by Raw Made, creative duo / George Hard @ Miaoran SS17

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Alicia Keys is leading the way of the no-make up movement. Rejecting to alter natural appearance and braving bare face during concerts. This new idea is making its way also to the runways of Milan Fashion Week – during Moto Guo fashion show models were seen sporting the latest collection with visible blemish and acne.

teen and William LeGate promotes amazing content without including persona. “We’re drama-free. No trolls, bullying, or negativity, just cool photos and videos” Mateen explains: “On Ponder, every post has the potential to be seen by everyone, so it’s not a popularity contest of how many followers the person posting has”.

We can see the return to brutalism aesthetics in all aspects of modern life: from web design, architecture to fashion magazines. The ugly is becoming interesting, searched for, accepted. Raw authenticity is what we are looking for after years of over-sexualization and editing.

Tired of the follow-for-follow and like-for-like competition, Generation Z is searching for authenticity. The cosmetic and fashion industries are catching up quickly. The new campaigns feature the natural, unfussy and flawed looks.

Millions of teens are committing “social media suicide“ (the term used for deleting all of one’s social media accounts). New wave social apps are trying to catch up with the new trends by turing their back to ego-driven aspects of old social-media platforms. Ponder app created by Tyler Ma-

Imperfections are becoming trendy. Freckles, braces, teeth gaps, visible tattoos and colored short hair few years ago were a no-no for aspiring models. Now agencies are looking for those features, they give the models personality that brands are searching for. Imperfect is becoming the new perfect.

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article

You are boring me words KAROLINA GENDEK-D’ANDREA images courtesy of KABOOMPICS.COM

After a few years of total immersion in new medias, technologies and cultural events, boredom is trending among all the generations.….and it’s a good thing. Why? We can no longer imagine standing in a queue or waiting for the tube without scrolling through Instagram or Facebook. The moment we open our eyes we check the emails, news pages and twitter. We live with our phones glued to our hands in the vain attempt not to get bored.

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Can you imagine your computer running on constantly without being reset? We force our brain to be active at all times and we don’t give it the time to relax and just wonder mindlessly. Have you ever thought why the best and most creative ideas strike you in the shower? Our brain

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needs breaks, those moments of boredom , to reset and reboot, otherwise it gets constantly bombarded with information that it doesn’t even get the time to process. This is why we should embrace boredom in order to boost creativity and imagination.


The boring movement is spreading around the world. From art and technology, to event planning and advertisement.

Marina Abramovic started to explore boredom back in 2014, and then again later last year, with installations that required visitors to sit at a table and count rice for hours. “If you can’t count the rice for three hours, you can’t do anything good in life” said Abramovic. Going against the fastpaced society the artist embraces the repetitive action of grain-counting as an psychological exercise. Getting lost in tedious tasks teaches us tolerance and patients, feeling bored in the short term can lead to feeling less bored and more creative in a long run. In September of last year, Barbican, the biggest performing art center in Europe, embraced the boredom trend by launching Lost In Thought. The first mindfulness opera in the world that features four hours of...silence, yoga and washing up. Bored? Embrace it!

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INTERVIEW

The B. by Federico Barrazzo images courtesy of STUDIO DMODA

“ I learned to achieve each one of my goals step by step, setting myself to earn one as soon as I earned another ”

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Who is Federico Barrazzo? I’m generally a lover of any element rich of sense, and specifically a Roman designer, born in 1992, who decided to give life to a personal complex view project. In 2011 was born The B, synthesis of a heterogeneous aesthetic observation, voted to a urban-wear reinterpretation of the stylistic coordinates of contemporary fashion. What sparked your interest in fashion? The potential of fashion as a form of expression, so effective and so strong but hidden and delicate at the same time. What is the message behind The B. by Federico Barrazzo? I’m tempted to speak plural. Overall the aim is to create balances between different stylistic figures, proposing a personal reading.

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What is your favorite part about being a fashion designer? The research and design phase which I think is the most important. In order to make your collection stand out you need to have a consistent project. How has your work evolved since you began your own label? Actually there is a continuous evolution. The Brand is currently joining man capsules and accessories, alongside the woman’s line, whose borders are never exclusive or defined.

the strength of feelings. My critical sense and my spirit of visual observation and manipulation come from my fashion styling studies. What are you fascinated by at the moment and how does it feed into your work? Lately I have been living a return to what I perceive as genuine, sincere, any item which transmits me a sense of harmony, naturalness of the body. It clearly affects from the colors to the softness of materials, volumes and silhouettes.

Do you have a specific research process when you start a new collection? I usually start collecting as many stimuli as I can. Sensorial experiences of all kind, not We know you studied fash- just visual. Precisely for this ion styling, how this back- reason it is not a purely styground influence your de- listic fashion-related study. sign choices? I think my It is important to store each path has been crucial. Every element as an enrichment. collection is shaped by a deep research phase which then happens to explode thanks to Are you I’m ing

you self taught or did study fashion design? self taught, my traincourse was different.

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You are going to show your latest collection at SUPER in Milan, tell us more about it and about the new collection. The S/S17 is characterized by a fresh and energetic urban wear. The man charges with an essentially contemporary allure, the woman identifies herself as an underground explorer.

What is the biggest lesson that you have learned since you started your company? I learned to achieve each one of my goals step by step, setting myself to earn one as soon as I earned another, as in a continuous growth.

How do you balance creativity with commerce? At the beginning What is your favorite piece from it is surely more complex to find the new collection? I’ve never had the right balance. Nowadays it ala favorite piece from any of my most comes naturally to me, it’s collections, it would be reductive. part of my creative process, and it is rightly so. The commercial aspect Who inspires you the most in is fundamental for every Brand. fashion? Anyone who stands out? I think that, fortunately or unfor- What advice would you give tunately, not everybody is able to to young designers? They have stand out, that’s what make it so to find their own identity, getdifficult. I have many references ting excited with what they in fashion, I do not feel like I can make and continuing to purname a few and exclude others. sue their creative instincts.

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INTERVIEW

Voodoo Jewels by Livia Lazzari photography ILARIA TASCHINI styling KAROLINA GENDEK-D’ANDREA make up & hair FULVIA TELLONE photo assistant GIANLUCA MARROZZINI

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Who is the girl behind Voodoo Jewels? Behind Voodoo Jewels there’s me, a 29 years old girl inspired by a deep passion for jewelry and craft work. How it all started? Voodoo Jewels is a spontaneously born project: it was all very natural. Making jewelry is my passion since I was little, I studied design and modelling and after some experience in industry companies I have felt the need to create my own project and so I started to experiment with materials and techniques until I found my language and my style. What was the first piece of jewelry you ever made? I think it was a little bracelet made with embroidery beads. I was six and I was traveling in Cremona with my parents, and in the main street, in a dry goods store they bought me six boxes of embroidery beads. I still have those beads. I keep them jealously. How did your designs evolve during the years? The Voodoo Jewels design evolves hand in hand with my craft skills. I studied as a designer and not as a goldsmith: I consider myself as a self-taught artisan; with the passage of the collections my technique has been refined and so my

jewelry has become more elaborate and sophisticated. In addition, the Voodoo Jewels concept itself has evolved with the passing of the seasons. Ideas that were a germ are now crisp and clear in my mind. Tell us more about the new collection. Onirica, the collection Fall / Winter 2016-2017, was born from the attraction for Dream, and contemplates the Moment When the human being comes into contact with the wilder, indomitable and inscrutable aspects of his personality. The creations are the result of a creative flow that does not arise limitations, a set of shapes and colors coming from distant worlds which collide and merge, creating a new and impalpable dimension. The dreamer moves between the conscious and the unconscious, the rational and the irrational; the only rule presiding over the collection is the juxtaposition of geometric and rational forms, the combination of fluid and evocative shapes.

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What inspires you most when you start working on a new collection? My collections born from the study of the nature and its many different worlds. The creative process comes always from something that fascinates me, as the shape of a leaf, a stone, the texture of a bark or rippling waves. From that moment on, I let the creativity takes over. I try to develop an idea in greater depth so that the collection could become a complete and coherent tale. Do you have you favorite pieces? Yes, but my selection of the most favorite pieces changes as the seasons pass because I’m always creating new pieces and I fall in love with them Do you feel more a designer or an entrepreneur? At this time, as I work alone I’m forced to feel myself both a designer and an entrepreneur, but also a graphic, a communication manager, a CFO.

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What type of clients would you like to target? I do not care to define the target of my clients, the only important thing is that people would appreciate the beauty and understand the message of Voodoo Jewels. Which part of the design process do you enjoy the most? The moment in which, starting from an idea I have in mind, I sculpt the wax. The end result is never what I imagined at the beginning, this is the aspect that fascinates me the most. The matter has its own life and the finished object is the result of collaboration between my mind and will of the matter itself. How long does it take to perfect a design? There is not a definite time, just one afternoon or many days.

Where can we find VooDoo Jewels? At the time you can find them in some of the best boutiques like “Degli Effetti” in Rome, Luisa Via Roma in Florence, Antonioli in Milan and L’Eclaireur in Paris. What’s it like to spot someone wearing one of your creations on the street? A great, great satisfaction. How much the upcoming trend influence your creative process? I try, as far as possible not to be influenced at all by the trends. It is the only way to create a unique and innovative product. What is your main next ambition? I have only one ambition. To become a successful designer.

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INTERVIEW

Rebecca Coltorti

all illustrations by rebecca coltorti

“ I’m currently trying to find a place in this crazy chaotic world “

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Who is Rebecca Coltorti? Rebecca is basically a super random person. she has strange passions and a real love for visual arts. she’s currently trying to find a place in this crazy chaotic world.

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How it all started? It started from nothing actually. I always been attracted by female beauty and that’s why I used to draw female models portraits. But then this passion for the black and white realistic drawings started to chock me. I wanted to try new techniques mostly using digital editing. Fashion allowed me to mix all these things and to be free to experiment. What inspires you when creating a new collage? The picture itself. I always try to keep its beauty and work on its inner soul. To make it more attractive and unique than it was before.

Can you take us through the process of a particular project? How does it all start and how do you proceed? I can talk about ‘Intangible’, the editorial I’ve been working on for Idol Magazine. It has been my first print publication ever, that is why it is so special to me. The editor contacted me and sent me the brief with a few reference pictures. There were 2 main difficult aspects: the big amount of pictures to do - about 20 - and the research of 185

the right compositions. I remember spending a lot of time cutting patterns and elements from magazines, which I scanned. There are also parts of pictures that I’ve take from internet; you can even see famous paintings pieces. So I digitally made the compositions. I usually prefer collaging with Photoshop because it allows me to explore many more options. This is the project that in absolute took me more time and one of my favorite.


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Do you start & finish one piece before starting another or you work on more projects in the same time? I do prefer to start & finish one piece before starting another because it keeps me more focused but sometimes the deadlines are urgent and my preferences are not contemplated.

Which artists influence you the most? Quentin Jones is my muse. Her works introduced me in this world and made me realize I wanted to do this as a job.

What is your next big dream project? Working with great and famous photographer for the most important magazines in the world.

you want to do without worrying about trends.

What is your advice for young artists? Be whatever you want to be and do whatever

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How would you describe your personal style? C h a m e l e o n , quirky and bold.

After your exhibition in Scotland – can we expect any new exibition soon? This is something I really do not know, but I can say that pretty soon you will see my works on clothes.


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