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Showing posts with label fashion advertising. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fashion advertising. Show all posts

Ryan McGinley Shoots Edun's First Ad Campaign Using Six Species Of Butterfly.



Founded by Bono and Ali Hewson in Spring 2005, Edun was launched as a for-profit fashion brand to raise awareness of the possibilities in Africa and encourage the industry to do business there.



With the aim of creating a global fashion brand and making beautiful clothing, Edun is committed to developing trade with Africa and encouraging others to do the same. Based on a belief that style should have substance, Edun sources globally so that as its business grows so does its production and work in Africa.


above: One of the new dresses from Edun's Spring Summer 2012 Collection

Now, since the inception of the brand, they will be launching their fist ad campaign shot by photographer Ryan McGinley. The six images, shown below, feature six species of butterfly that are all indigenous to Africa.






“We really wanted to capture the essence of Edun, and of what inspires the brand, which is duality and transformation,” said Edun's Ali Hewson in a phone interview with WWD from Africa. She added that it was time to tell Edun’s story through a campaign, and to build on the momentum of the brand, which is posting double-digit growth each season.

WWD reports that the campaign will break in the March issues of titles including Italian, French and U.S. Vogue; Vanity Fair; Dazed & Confused; AnOther; T The New York Times Magazine, and the Sunday Times of London. Short “blink videos” will appear on Edun.com and via social media outlets. A launch event is set to take place during New York Fashion Week.

Edun’s chief executive officer, Janice Sullivan, said the brand is also expanding internationally: The company, which is 49 percent owned by LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton, is negotiating a distribution agreement with Itochu in Japan, and planning to open a pop-up shop in Harvey Nichols on Wednesday. It will open a pop-up shop at Le Bon Marché in Paris at the end of March, and for spring it will begin being carried at Bloomingdale’s and Neiman Marcus.

Currently Edun is sold globally in leading department and specialty stores and online.



Ad Photography Credits:
creative director: Sharon Wauchob
creative consultant: Jefferson Hack
photographer: Ryan McGinley


The Sexiest Blackgama Ads Over the Past 43 Years and Interesting Trivia about the Campaign.




One of the most beautiful and enduring ad campaigns of all time doesn't get a lot of press because of its controversial product - real fur. But Blackglama has kept their same ad campaign and headline for over 40 years and it still works. Photographs of the world's most beautiful women - and in a few cases, men - wrapped in the world's finest black ranch mink.

In this post I will share with you what I feel are the sexiest ads from the campaign, the ones that truly warrant a "legend" status, the only males in the campaign, other work inspired by the ads and some juicy trivia. But first, a little background on how the ad campaign began.

In 1968, New York ad executive Jane Trahey conceived of the campaign and invented the name "Blackglama." She felt that fur wouldn't show up well in the photography so she devised a 'gimmick' - this being the association with someone very famous. The campaign was executed by her associate, Peter Rogers, who later, in 1974, bought out the firm and continued with the campaign. He also wrote the 1979 book "What Becomes A Legend Most?" about the campaign. More trivia about the campaign after the images.



The following images are my personal picks for the sexiest photos since the campaign began, shown from most recent to the earliest. I have chosen portraits that exude sexiness in different ways. Some show a lot of skin, others possess a come hither look in the subject's eyes that are just as sensual. You may be thinking it's odd that I chose to include Angela Lansbury and Julie Andrews in a man's suit (a nod to her role in Victor, Victoria) or a bundled up Lauren Bacall, but one look at their expressions and you'll see that many women certainly feel sexy when wrapped in the word's finest fur.

Janet Jackson, 2011:


Janet Jackson, 2010:

Elizabeth Hurley, 2008:

Naomi Cambell, 2007:

Elle Macpherson, 2005:

Cindy Crawford, 2004:

Gisele Bundchen, 2002:

Linda Evangelista, 2001:

Catherine Deneuve, 1989:

Cher, 1986:

Ann Margaret, 1985:

Sophia Loren, 1982:

Julie Andrews, 1982:

Natalie Wood, 1981:

Lana Turner, 1980:

Angela Lansbury, 1979:

Faye Dunaway, 1978:

Shirley Maclaine, 1977:

Liv Ullman, 1977:

Raquel Welch, 1975:

Bridget Bardot, 1970:

Maria callas, 1970:

Marlene Deitrich, 1969:

Lauren Bacall, 1968:

Barbra Streisand, 1968:


I can't just show you the sexiest without sharing with you some portraits of those who truly warrant the "legend" status.

Ten who truly warrant Legend status:
Lillian Gish, Gloria Swanson, Bette Davis, Joan Crawford, Judy Garland, Helen Hayes, Lucille Ball, Diana Ross, Audrey Hepburn and Elizabeth Taylor






Trivia and tidbits about the Blackglama ad campaign:

• Photographer Richard Avedon shot the campaign for the first five years. Underrated American photographer Bill King, who died of AIDS in 1987, followed Avedon. Rocco Laspata of Laspata/Decaro has been shooting the campaign since then.

• With the exception of color photos in the 2004 and 2005 campaigns featuring Cindy Crawford and Elle Macpherson respectively, the portraits were always shot in black and white.

•Although the typeface has changed twice since the campaign's inception (first Cooper Black condensed, then Bodoni Condensed, and finally Optima) the ads have always had the same headline "What becomes a Legend most?*"

• *Originally, the line was typeset with an initial cap on the words "what" and "legend" only, when the typeface was changed from the original, the headline was set with all initial caps.

• From 2001 through 2009, the campaign featured supermodels (Linda Evangelista, Gisele Bündchen, Cindy Crawford, Elle Macpherson, Naomi Campbell and Elizabeth Hurley) as opposed to screen and entertainment legends. This is also the year that more than one ad was shot for the campaign so as to show more available products from the brand.

• As of 1980, the models were never paid nor did their names appear on the ads, but they each received a coat of their choice. I do not know if this is still the case.

• Actress Claudette Colbert appeared in the campaign twice, once in 1971 and again in 1989:


•Liza Minelli, Lillian Hellman and Bette Davis all posed with lit cigarettes:


• Janet Jackson is the only model to be featured in the campaign for two consecutive years in a row (2010 and 2011).

• Andy Warhol was so fond of the Judy Garland ad in the campaign that he turned it into one of famous colored silkscreens:


• Carol Burnett was the only one to turn down a coat and instead asked for the money to be donated to charity:


• The only men to ever pose for the campaign were Ray Charles, Tommy Tune, Luciano Pavorotti and Rudolf Nureyev. Frank Sinatra bowed out at the last minute.



• Dolly Parton, Katharine Hepburn and Jackie Onassis turned down repeated offers to star in the campaign.

• In 1984 Joan Rivers released a comedy album on whose cover she posed as a Blackglama ad with the line altered to read "What Becomes a Semi-Legend Most?:


• PETA created their own mock version (below) of the ad campaign with Amy Sedaris in protest:


• Artist Mark Verabioff's “The Blackglama Insurgents” 2005, included 18 page tears from the campaign marked with masculine gestures in spray paint referencing male sexual pleasure and violence:



"All legends share a timelessness, a glamour, an endurance that goes beyond what’s currently or merely in vogue." -- Peter Rogers

You can see a gallery of all 108 legends here at Blackglama.

information sources: Blackglama.com, People Magazine article from 1979 and the 1979 book Blackglama: What Becomes A Legend Most (now out of print)

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