GUESS GIRL MODEL SEARCH NORTH AMERICA (WITH ELLE & FORD MODELS)

May.1,2013
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  • 日本語

15 MORE DAYS!

We have already received well over 10,000 applications, do not wait!

Register now at www.GUESSGirl.com


Calling all girls 16 years and older!

GUESS is partnering with Ford Models and ELLE for its first ever North American model search to find the next GUESS Girl.

Contestants can upload three images to shop.guess.com/en/guessgirl/,

or through the GUESS Facebook page,

by May 15th

for the chance to be the star of ELLE’s GUESS photo shoot

and a $2,500 GUESS shopping spree.


“From my very first campaign for GUESS over 30 years ago to now,

it always starts with finding the right model to portray the GUESS Girl,”said

Paul Marciano, CEO and Creative Director of GUESS?, Inc.

Are you next?

Reading CNN news today: What do I have in common with Maria Sharapova?

May.1,2013
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  • 日本語

Maximizing ‘Brand Sharapova’: The man behind Maria’s millions

Reading the news this morning….


This remind me of my husband, he is the architect behind my success for sure.

In life there is always one person that you must trust. I trust him to make the right decision for me.

Actually Maria’s manager, Max Eisenbud, is my husband’s long time friend.

They worked together at IMG for years.

In 2006, Maria became my client and I got her, her first endorsement in Japan with Samantha Thavasa.

Read CNN news here: http://edition.cnn.com/2013/05/01/sport/tennis/maria-sharapova-eisenbud-tennis/index.html?hpt=hp_c5

REMEMBER SUN? “Korea” AT MISS UNIVERSE?

April.29,2013
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  • 日本語

REMEMBER SUN AT MISS UNIVERSE?


Miss Korea 2008 Jiseon Lee created a trend-setting fashion brand called

“J APOSTROPH”


and it is A-MAZING!!!!

Check out her collection here for our winter 2013

 


INTRODUCING: Alec Monopoly [an American street artist, graffiti artist, and painter]

April.27,2013
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  • 日本語
{Sth African Model Nedine Vos]

Alec Monopoly is an American street artist, graffiti artist, and painter.

He is known for his satirical spins using the Monopoly man, in reference to contemporary styles or situations


On Aspect of
ABOUT Vandalism:

When asked by Complex Magazine about his brush with the NYPD Vandal Squad,
and jumping through a garbage chute in an effort to avoid them, the artist had this to say:

“It didn’t hurt, but going down [the garbage chute] was kind of nasty, being in all of that garbage.
I was so paranoid, I thought they were tapping my phones.
I actually still think they were tapping my phones.
When we were setting up the gallery show, there were like four cop cars outside the building,
and if the gallery hadn’t been connected to a hotel, I wouldn’t have gotten out of there.
I got out and into a cab and laid down in the back seat.
That’s the good thing about New York, once you’re in a cab you can be invisible.”

Although graffiti continues to be conveyed as a crime,
in his feature in Juxtapoz Magazine,
the artist discussed his best efforts to avoid the vandalism aspect of the street art world:

“I stay away from mailboxes, highways, freeways,
and basically any federal and government property.
I like warehouses and abandoned buildings.
For example I would never hit a coffee shop like the one we’re in: they [the owners] are trying to make it just like I am.
I try to be as positive as I can about what I put out there and I try to do it with imagery everyone can identify with.
Most people walking by my stuff are not graffiti people or art people,
so figuring out a way that everyone can identify with my work is important.”