The Addiction: Lindsey Wixson All Grown Up
Edited by Nicole Vardo
Our little Wixson isn’t so little anymore, and as the face of the November 2011 W Korea issue, it’s safe to say this pucker-faced beauty is looking older and taking on a new look.
Edited by Nicole Vardo
Our little Wixson isn’t so little anymore, and as the face of the November 2011 W Korea issue, it’s safe to say this pucker-faced beauty is looking older and taking on a new look.
Edited by The Fashion Web
Edited by The Fashion Web
Edited by The Fashion Web
In one of his recent campaigns, noted photographer Ryan McGinley shot model Abbey Lee Kershaw jumping off a building in three different outfits. The shoot took place in South Korea where female suicide rates are extraordinarily high and where model and countrywoman Daul Kim took her own life just this past year. Good job, Ry-Ry. Good job.
Edited by The Fashion Web
Edited by The Fashion Web

Besides these three major covers Freja is also part of Tom Ford, Chanel, Valentino and Max Mara campaigns. That’s not all, Terry Richardson photographed Erichsen for Vogue Nippon August 2010 editorial.
Edited by The Fashion Web


One of my favorite era’s.
Vogue Korea July 2010.
F.Y.I (Inspiration)
Courtesy of: Sofashionable.
Edited by The Fashion Web
“During Fashion Week, I walked in eight shows. They have a lot of flash – bam, bam, bam! When I walk on the runway, they all take pictures of me and I pose. I hear the sound, and it makes me so happy.” Noma Han
occupation: model
South Korea, where he grew up and “things are quiet,” was definitely not going to be a good fit for someone like Noma, who can barely contain his enthusiasm for everything. To call him passionate is an understatement, but he is, in the lightest and no less meaningful sense of the word. Noma came to New York on his own, barely speaking the language, and among many successes, is presently in the Benetton Ad Campaigns. He inhales the “bright lights” of the big cities, of which he has a lot of exposure of due to his modeling career, but humor with it all is never far behind. Noma loves what he refers to as “British style,” in his foulard suspenders, rolled jeans, Doc Martens, and bowler, but he equally jumps for joy in his skateboard-inspired, glow-in-the-dark Inventory sweatshirt. In addition to skateboarding in his spare time, he watches folkloric action cartoons like Wampus, whose skin stretches like rubber and draws his own Lampoon-like renderings for tattoos on his body. So refreshingly unencumbered by what other people think of him, Noma makes fashion fun and happy, as it should be. He can’t help but pull his Prince Peter t-shirt of the performance artist Lindsay Kemp over his face, and by doing so, he says something very profound without even trying: in the words of William Shakespeare, “all the world’s a stage.”
If you like Noma, you might also enjoy Nick Cohen or Shayne Oliver.
LINK LOVE:Noma Han
Become a FashionIndie.com contributor. Subscribe to Envy.