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| Forum: Casa BL.....the Fashion Forum |
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| Topic: Life-size Barbie has 39" bust, 18" waist: |
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| | Topic: Givenchy Puts Transsexual Model In Fall Ad Campaign (PHOTOS) |
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| | Topic: Lea T., Transsexual Model, Talks Sex Change & The Night She Found Herself |
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| Lea T., Transsexual Model, Talks Sex Change & The Night She Found Herself [message #120134] |
Fri, 12 November 2010 17:12 |
Teresa  Messages: 8227 Registered: September 2007 Location: Salem, Oregon |
Senior Member Beginning Life Founder BL3D |
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Lea T., Transsexual Model, Talks Sex Change & The Night She Found Herself
First Posted: 08- 3-10 01:21 PM | Updated: 10- 3-10 05:12 AM

Lea T., the star of Givenchy's autumn/winter ad campaign, recently opened up to several magazines and newspapers about being a transsexual supermodel, even posing nude in French Vogue "in the name of all my transsexual friends" (NSFW photos here). The Guardian UK traced Lea's rise to the top, from her birth as Leandro in 1981 in Belo Horizonte Brazil to soccer hero Toninho Cerezo and a Catholic family to becoming Riccardo Tisci of Givenchy's muse.
According to the Guardian a Rio gossip column contacted Cerezo and reported, "We got in touch with the former star but, irritated, he limited himself to saying that he had four children, one of them called Leandro...When asked if the boy had starred in the Givenchy campaign, Cerezo hung up the phone." However, Lea's brother Gustavo said, "It's Lea's success, not the family's. All I will say is that we are on her side and we support her."
The Guardian also reports that:
In the Vanity Fair interview, moreover, [Lea] said she "never spoke directly" to her father about undergoing the hormone treatment that will, eventually, give her the body of a woman. Conversation, she said, was limited to trivialities.
Lea has credited Tisci with her ability to be comfortable with herself. She remembered for French Vogue, "One night [Tisci] encouraged me to wear pumps to a party. We went shopping for 'drag queen' shoes and we bleached my eyebrows. It was a revelation."
ABC News reports that Lea is set to undergo a full sex change from male to female and is currently undergoing hormone replacement therapy. Lea told June's Italian Vanity Fair, "The choice is between being unhappy forever or trying to be happy."
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/08/03/lea-t-transsexual-m odel-t_n_669027.html
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| | Topic: Lea T, Transsexual Model, Scores Magazine Cover (PHOTO) |
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| Lea T, Transsexual Model, Scores Magazine Cover (PHOTO) [message #120133] |
Fri, 12 November 2010 17:03 |
Teresa  Messages: 8227 Registered: September 2007 Location: Salem, Oregon |
Senior Member Beginning Life Founder BL3D |
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Lea T, Transsexual Model, Scores Magazine Cover (PHOTO)
Posted: 11-12-10 04:30 PM
Transsexual model Lea T, best-known for her work with Givenchy, nabbed the next the cover of Lurve magazine. She's clad in one of Ricardo Tisci's latest designs.
Lea started off as Tisci's personal assistant and fit model, and has always credited him with her ability to be comfortable with herself. She once recalled to for French Vogue, "One night [Tisci] encouraged me to wear pumps to a party. We went shopping for 'drag queen' shoes and we bleached my eyebrows. It was a revelation."
(Via Models.com)

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/11/12/lea-t-transsexual-m odel-s_n_782955.html
Attachment: LEA-T.jpg
(Size: 60.81KB, Downloaded 1170 time(s))
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| | Topic: Beautiful boys |
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| Beautiful boys [message #120064] |
Fri, 12 November 2010 08:36 |
Teresa  Messages: 8227 Registered: September 2007 Location: Salem, Oregon |
Senior Member Beginning Life Founder BL3D |
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Beautiful boys
November 12, 2010

Extraordinary beauty ... Andrej Pejic.
Fashion is on the crest of a new 'femimen' trend, writes Janice Breen Burns.
Andrej Pejic is a slender, spectacularly beautiful blond, a softly spoken 19-year-old from Broadmeadows whose prospects in modelling, just a few years ago, would have been negligible. His ''look'' is the effeminate opposite of the lean, handsome, muscle-ripped male models more typically cast for ad campaigns and fashion runways since the late 1980s.
But, 18 months ago, Matthew Anderson, director of Chadwick Models in Melbourne, recognised a flicker of the future in Pejic. ''His beauty,'' he says, ''was extraordinary. He's also intelligent and it's amazing, really, that he survived growing up in Broadmeadows, that he's just so comfortable in his own skin.''
At the time, Blind Freddy could predict that, as a model, Pejic would not be cast to sell jackhammers or Y-fronts. But, Anderson recognised instantly that Pejic's ''femiman'' look was so jarringly feminine, so shockingly beautiful, it would intrigue fashion's most creative photographers, producers and editors. ''He probably wasn't going to be commercial,'' Anderson recalls. ''But it was a look that was really exciting, very interesting, very high fashion.''
Advertisement: Story continues below There was an initial flurry of local interest in Pejic, including his walking in Melbourne's Spring Fashion Week shows, which the teenager juggled with VCE study. Anderson then packed him off to London, then Paris, then Tokyo, to test his theory. ''Andrej was definitely a calculated risk; we really weren't sure how it would work out. In the global financial crisis, a lot of commercial decisions were being made above creative ones and that meant the strong man, Chesty Bond-types were more likely to work.''
Pejic, however, was greeted with a certain joy. ''The photographers seemed to like my look,'' he says. ''They talked about the extreme androgyny and commented a lot on how thin I am.'' Since leaving his mother, brother and Broadmeadows home last February, Pejic admits he has lost weight, a fact that only intensified his angular beauty and appeal to stylists, who promptly plucked his eyebrows into elegant arcs, ran trails of shadow over his lids, straightened or waved his mane of pale hair and added a slick of lip colour or gloss to his soft, pillow lips.
''I don't mind that; I was happy with that look because I was always experimenting with it, even before I started modelling,'' he says. ''There are a lot of boys who look like me in the fashion industry, but they're not prepared to have it made intense like that.''
Pejic resolved to be one of the few who would, and it has paid off. He is feted on industry websites, including Japan's Vogue Hommes as modelling's ''one to watch''. During the menswear season in Paris in June, he walked in shows for Jean Paul Gaultier, John Galliano and Raf Simmons, among others. He says his appearance caused a fascinating unease.
''At first everyone thought there must be a blonde girl doing all the men's shows,'' he laughs. ''They asked Raf Simmons if he was doing women's wear now. They figured it out eventually.''
After Paris, the commissions accelerated. Vogue Paris editor Carine Roitfeld, renowned for her razor radar, cast and styled Pejic for a spread in her August issue based on transsexual icons.
''Kate Moss dropped into that shoot,'' Pejic says casually, ''She said how beautiful everything was, and jumped around a bit.'' Later, Pejic was cast for an Arena Homme Plus editorial, then by Italian Vogue for its November issue, a spread called ''Venus in Furs'' shot by Steven Meisel and featuring two other ''femimen'' models, and by Turkish Vogue for a 16-page spread, ''Androjen''. Fashion blogger Patty Huntington, of Frockwriter.com.au, says Pejic's body of work, particularly his commissions for three Vogue mastheads, is probably unique.
''[I] can't think of any other time that a new Australian model has been so heavily showcased in multiple international editions of the world's best-known fashion magazine brand in such a short space of time,'' she wrote.
Matthew Anderson believes it is simply that Pejic, and another promising model he recently signed with an equally strong ''femiman'' look, James Varley, 21, have materialised at a tipping point in the global fashion Zeitgeist. ''Society and cultural values have changed, are changing,'' Anderson says. ''People - young, particularly - are more accepting of all kinds of sexuality and ways of life. It reminds me of the 1980s, when ambiguous sexuality was accepted and people weren't ashamed to show it and sell it.''
For Varley, the fast-talking, highly creative Melbourne University science student tipped by Anderson to follow a career trajectory similar to Pejic's, the rising relevance of ''femimen'' is also about a global groundswell of yearning and hope among his generation. ''What's androgyny? It's the middle ground. It's halfway,'' he says. ''It's unity, but still with individuality.'' He plans to waive his studies and filmmaking, if he has to, for a semester, a year, or more, to cash in on his evocative boy/girl beauty, hopefully in London and Paris.
''I'd like to do what Andrej's done,'' he says. ''I'm more of a rock dude myself; I've even got a bad teenage beard at the moment, but I'm shaving it all off for the androgynous look.''
http://www.smh.com.au/lifestyle/fashion/beautiful-boys-20101 111-17pb4.html
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| | Topic: from-a-beautiful-woman-to-a-plastic-surgery-addict |
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| | Topic: 'Top Model' contestant to walk runway for children's hospital benefit |
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| 'Top Model' contestant to walk runway for children's hospital benefit [message #119427] |
Fri, 05 November 2010 16:45 |
Teresa  Messages: 8227 Registered: September 2007 Location: Salem, Oregon |
Senior Member Beginning Life Founder BL3D |
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'Top Model' contestant to walk runway for children's hospital benefit
Prince George's native makes time to support cause that hits home

Isis King, a Prince George's native who appeared on America's Next Top Model, will hit the runway as part of Catwalk
For A Cause. (Tony Veloz, Baltimore Sun / November 7, 2010)
By John-John Williams IV, The Baltimore Sun
November 7, 2010
Isis King is usually fielding questions about being the first transgender contestant named as a finalist on "America's Next Top Model," the time she spent as a homeless teen, or even about her latest hairstyle -- she recently switched to a fire-engine red hairdo.
Somehow, the heart-wrenching story about the death of her baby sister, Channel, gets lost in the shuffle.
One-year-old Channel died in 1992 after being born with her organs on the outside of her body. She required a number of medical procedures during her short life, King explained.
"They couldn't save her," she said.
King immediately thought about Channel when she was asked to participate in Catwalk For A Cause, a series of fashion shows sponsored by KIS Agency, an Annapolis-based events management and promotions company.
Each fashion show benefits a different cause. Proceeds from the Nov. 14 event, which will be held at the Tremont Hotel, will help support Johns Hopkins Children's Center in Baltimore.
"I have a special place in my heart when it comes to children," said King, a Prince George's County native who now lives in New York City as she pursues a career as an actress, fashion designer, and other artistic endeavors. "Helping children and giving them the proper medical information is really important."
King will headline more than 60 models during the fashion show that will feature 11 designers, and a 55-foot-long runway. Davanna Brooker, a 10-year-old modeling phenom who appeared on "America's Next Top Model" two seasons ago, will also be in the show. Booker is also known as "Davanna Diva" or "Baby Naomi (Campbell)" because of her strong runway walk.
"This is a show in Baltimore, but it is not a quote-unquote Baltimore show," said Lana Rae, event organizer. "And it's all for a great cause. You can't ask for anything more."
Rae, the mother of two children, said that the Children's Center made sense to her.
"I'm lucky," she said. "My children are healthy and beautiful. I don't know what I would do if something happened to them... . This is a great cause. Johns Hopkins does a great job. I couldn't' think of anything better."
The event will fund items typically not covered by insurance, such as clothing for children in the Pediatric Emergency Department, programs and camps for children with chronic illnesses, meal tickets for families in need who come to the center unexpectedly, and support groups for cancer patients and their families.
Johns Hopkins Children Center has been open since 1912, and typically treats 120,000 children each year. The hospital runs the gamut of services and attracts patients from across the globe.
"We see it all," said Kristen Porter, assistant director of development for Johns Hopkins. "We see the sickest of the sickest children."
Third party unrestrictive funds, which are the items not typically covered by insurance, are dependent on charity events such as Catwalk for a Cause, Porter said.
"It is our bread and butter," she said about the funds. "It is very important to us. We appreciate anyone who is willing to do such an event."
King is excited to help out with the cause and to return to Maryland for a fashion show.
"Of course it is a fashion show, but by me showing my support hopefully others will show their support," King said.
john-john.williams@baltsun.com
Copyright © 2010, The Baltimore Sun
http://www.baltimoresun.com/features/bs-gl-goodworks-isis-20 101107,0,1925887.story
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| | Topic: Cher Talks Politics, Transgender Son In Vanity Fair |
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| Cher Talks Politics, Transgender Son In Vanity Fair [message #119171] |
Wed, 03 November 2010 09:16 |
Teresa  Messages: 8227 Registered: September 2007 Location: Salem, Oregon |
Senior Member Beginning Life Founder BL3D |
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Cher Talks Politics, Transgender Son In Vanity Fair
11/3/2010 10:10 AM ET
(RTTNews) - Cher has opened up about her daughter Chastity's decision to change genders and live out her life as Chaz Bono. In a recent interview with Vanity Fair, the "Turn Back Time" star also speaks out against a few of her least favorite political figures.
"If I woke up tomorrow in a guy's body, I would kick and scream and cry and f***ing rob a bank, because I cannot see myself as anything but who I am - a girl. I would not take it as well as Chaz has. I couldn't imagine it," Cher says in the interview.
She adds that while she completely supports Chaz's lifestyle, there has been a period of adjustment.
"Well, she's a very smart girl -- boy! This is where I get into trouble. My pronouns are f***ed. I still don't remember to call her 'him.' She's really cool about it -- such an easygoing person," Cher adds.
She continues on to confess her dislike for former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin. Cher admits that the last presidential election had her glued to the television.
"I got so obsessed with it that it was kind of interfering with my life. Sarah Palin came on and I thought, Oh, f***, this is the end. Because a dumb woman is a dumb woman."
by RTT Staff Writer
For comments and feedback: contact editorial@rttnews.com
http://www.rttnews.com/Content/EntertainmentNews.aspx?Sectio n=2&Id=1467759&SM=1
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| | Topic: Vintage looks |
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| | Topic: A couple of resourses |
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| | Topic: What's this all about? |
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| What's this all about? [message #86923] |
Mon, 25 January 2010 18:24 |
Hilary  Messages: 5534 Registered: October 2007 Location: 2, Camberwick Green, Trum... |
Senior Member BL Administrator (Retired) BL3d |
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This is a public forum intended to be a place to post fashion thoughts. It is open to members and non members; anonymous posting is fine.
Copy and paste links and pictures to well know magazines and news items but please give them full credits if possible.
Posts can be TS or not; just remember a good women needs a good wardrobe.
Otherwise the usual BL rules apply. Enjoy.
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