Latina Magazine

May 2013

Latina Magazine is the definitive fashion, beauty, and lifestyle magazine for Latina women. Latina is written in English for today’s Hispanic woman and is committed to helping each reader attain her maximum potential. Each issue of Latina magazine covers the latest and features articles on Latin entertainment, celebrities, fashion and beauty, food and fiestas, health and fitness, relationships, careers and educational opportunities, and more. Latina is the leading monthly lifestyle, entertainment, beauty, and fashion magazine for acculturated Hispanic women. Along with its daily online destination Latina.com, Latina has a combined audience of 3 million. Latina was named to Adweek’s ‘Hot List’ in 2000 & 2001 and named Best Magazine by Advertising Age in 2000.

In 1996, Christy Haubegger founded Latina magazine. Haubegger conceived of and developed a business plan for a groundbreaking magazine that would showcase fashion, beauty, lifestyle and empowerment for Hispanic women. The magazine first launched Latina magazine back in 1996 as a quarterly with Jennifer Lopez on the first cover, before she was a rising star. Today, Jennifer Lopez is an internationally-respected entrepreneur who has built a multimillion-dollar empire around several fashion and beauty lines. Her business interests reflect that of her fellow Latinas, who are starting businesses at a rate of six times the national average, while in the pages of Latina, readers have demanded more coverage of career and financial topics, as well as inspiring corporate role models.

In October 2011, Latina magazine celebrated its 15th anniversary with a special quinceñeara  collector’s issue, “15 Latinas We Love,” which highlighted fifteen of the most influential Latina celebrities since the magazine hit the stands 15 years ago. Latina’s 15th anniversary issue took 9 months of planning, 7 photo shoots, more than 100 red designer dresses and upwards of $10 million in jewelry to create the triple gatefold cover.

In the 3-page fold out cover, from left to right: Shakira, Selena Gomez, Salma Hayek, Zoe Saldana, Eva Longoria, Gloria Estefan, Michelle Rodriguez, Jessica Alba, Daisy Fuentes, America Ferrera, Rosario Dawson, Ana de la Reguera, Natalie Morales, Rosie Perez and La La Anthony.

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The magazine selected these ladies because “these are women who live not only in the worlds of music and movies and TV, but also serve as the faces of big beauty lines and big corporations, who use their power to get us to vote and to give back, who work both in front of and behind the cameras to break down stereotypes and redefine the way non-Latinos see us.”

Behind the scenes video Latin cover shoot with Rosario Dawson:

Behind the scenes Latina cover shoot with Eva Mendes

Steps On How to Get Salma Hayek’s Sexy Waves

Bollywood Welcomes Caribbean Fashion with open Arms

Bollywood Welcomes Caribbean Fashion with Open Arms

The second largest film industry, Bollywood, has recently  integrated Caribbean music and fashion in many movies. At first, isolated from all music and cultural genres of other countries, Bollywood has finally decided to open up its industry to the world. Although Indian fashion involves sarees, kurta and kameez, they are now becoming outdated among many women. Modern women craves for something fresh and they don’t mind at all wearing dresses of other countries. The best way to catch Indian women in terms fashion is through movies. New trendy styles open the doorways for many fashion designers around the world to showcase their styles before the large audience. Movies are the best medium to express new fashions.    Recently, in the year 2011, the movie, Zindagi Na Milegi Dubara, showcased both Caribbean music and fashion which mesmerized many Indian audience. Very little was known before about the Caribbean culture, after the release of this movie, people were more interested to know about the culture and other Latin outwears. Long dresses with beautiful prints of flowers and the hems cut out in a flowing pattern became really appealing to the Indian women.  One strap dresses with unique designs became famous for party wears.

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1. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o7rsi9gYvLo

Similarly, another movie named Aisha released in 2010,  included a samba style song and dance. This song just ripped the Bollywood screen. Fashion statement made by the dresses that the dancers wore in this dance was liked by everyone. Most included short skirts with beautiful tops. The fashion madness not only touched women but also made a huge impact on men.  The short sleeves with dress pants and trendy hats just uplifted the style of the men. It was never been imagined that one day Caribbean fashion would boldly stepp up on the Bollywood platform and make a daring attempt to captivate the hearts on Indian people regarding fashion. Indeed, the Caribbean people and fashion designers have been successful in defining Indian fashion in new terms. Furthermore, integration of Caribbean fashion has made Indian people to step out of their strict cultural boundaries and to take a sneek-peek at other cultures hot trends on fashion.

2. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=78AOCLReZeg

Also by writing this blog, I got the opportunity to understand more about the fashion in the Caribbeans. I only watched the dresses and the dances that the actors do on the screen. I have never been able to step out and think where these new fashion trends came from. From now on I will remain cautious to look out for new cultural incorporation in the Bollywood song and would try to know more from where the trend came from.

123 Camera, Lights, Action!!! The World Behind Caribbean color and flow!!!

 

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Throughout the Caribbean, specifically the West Indies, clothing has a distinct look, style, and significance. Clothing has been used for political statements as well as ethnic movements. Most of all, however, clothing is just the way to represent the Caribbean. Color and flowing clothes are flavors unique to Caribbean islands such as Trinidad and Tobago, Jamaica, and Bermuda. Yet even within these countries, color and style takes on very different characteristics.

Most of the islands believe in bright vibrant colors as well as flowing loose clothing, but there are still unique varieties throughout the Islands. For example, in Trinidad and Bermuda, loose Bohemian dresses are very common. Bright colors may vary between oranges, yellows, blues, and greens. The clothing may also be very revealing, scarcely covering the body. On the other hand, it may vary tremendously in Jamaica. Jamaican clothing is often representative of their African heritage. Colors are typically the pan African red yellow and green or the Jamaican flag’s green yellow and black. The clothing is loose but traditionally not as revealing. Historically, blouses and skirts were worn by women, covering their bosoms, hips, waist, and buttocks. Clothing was often a way to revisit nationalism and African pride and this significant meaning has continued to present day. But the meaning behind colorful and flowing, ‘typical’, Caribbean clothing is not always historical, sometimes it’s as simple and easy as the Caribbean islands themselves.

Anya Ayoung Chee is a Trinidadian fashion designer. She was Miss Universe as well as Miss Trinidad, before venturing out to explore the world of designing. In 2011, she went public on Project Runway, eventually winning the entire competition. Ayoung Chee had introduced America and the global world to ‘true’ Caribbean clothing. She says that ” Colors are a way of revealing the Caribbean”. She explains that her clothing is her way of carrying her home, around the world. She wants people to experience her homeland with her, while still feeling sexy and youthful , and such is accomplished through creating vibrant clothing.

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Lastly, Colors are just the Caribbean way of having fun and relaxing. Colors are often used in abundance during Carnivals. Whether in the United States or the Caribbean, colorful feathers and costumes, are always ways we remember the Caribbean. They represent Caribbean movement and excitement, bringing attention to the spectacular spices the Caribbean can put together. Parade participants have stated that they believe that they enable viewers to experience the islands as paraders revisit nationalistic feelings, all while being entertaining and enjoyable. Rather than participating in a political movement, Colorful parade costumes can spread a nationalistic message through exotic styles and musical enjoyment and still get the whole world’s attention.

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While to us it may just seem like typical Caribbean clothing, styles in the islands are very unique and special. The colors and the texture all have importance, even if it’s simply recognition. We can never deny that the beautiful combination of colors and textures, are contagious and obliges us to take in all the flavors the Caribbean has to offer. The sights of Caribbean colors and beautiful Bohemian dresses enters us into a world of the Caribbean and make us long to look at more. Just that fast, we have been an involuntary candidate to Caribbean national and historical messages and political gain. Yet there is no blame in putting beauty where it belongs, and the Caribbean islands once again have shown that they are in so many ways, very beautiful.

Askira

Oscar de la Renta

Almost 50 years ago, when Oscar de la Renta first started designing clothes under his own name, American fashion journalists who came to interview him would assume he was Italian or Spanish. After all, he had worked for Balenciaga in Spain, and for Lanvin in Paris, and his name sounded rather sophisticated. “When I said I was from the Dominican Republic, I saw their faces drop. They’d think, ‘What am I going to write?’ So I’d say, ‘I want to turn a negative into a positive. I want to become the first Latin American designer who is known all over the world.’ ”

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Jessica Alba at Golden Globes 2013

It would seem that he has done exactly that – except that he has gone well beyond it and become, in a sense, the American designer par excellence. He is the first choice of First Ladies (Hillary Clinton and Laura Bush), and his gowns have been given a recent lease of life among younger women by Sarah Jessica Parker and the red carpet appearances of Jessica Alba, Jennifer Lopez, Halle Berry and Catherine Zeta-Jones. Now 80, de la Renta’s professed secret is that he is not overly avant-garde – never 10 steps ahead, as he puts it, “but always only one step and a half”.

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Oscar Aristides Ortiz Renta Fiallo was born in Santo Domingo on July 22, 1932, two years into the dictatorship of Rafael Trujillo. The family was not rich, he says, but it was proud of its history: the de la Rentas (“The original family name was Ortiz de la Renta,” the designer will tell The New York Times in 1980, explaining that he reverted to the “de la” at the age of 20) had been on the island for 250 years. It might be assumed that, as the only son of a Dominican mother and a Puerto Rican insurance-agent father who had six daughters, the young Oscar might have been led towards an interest in clothes. But not at all: his sisters, he laughs, were “no fashion plates”, and anyway, had he told his father he was considering becoming a fashion designer, “he’d probably have dropped dead on the spot”.

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Spring 2013

De La Renta’s love for fashion grew when he left the Caribbean island of Domican Republic and moved to Madrid at 18 years old to study painting at the Academy of San Fernando. While in Spain, he dreamed of becoming an abstract painter but instead became wooed by the world of fashion design. His obvious talent for illustration opened doors for him, and he quickly landed an apprenticeship with Spain’s most renowned couturier, Cristobal Balenciaga. De La Renta quickly became immersed in the craft of fashion design. At this point in his life De La Renta was only working with the best of the best. In 1960, he flew to Paris to work with Fashion Designer Antonio Castillo at the house of Lanvin. Castillo at the time was hired by Jeanne Lanvin to relaunch the brand’s name. “Working for incredible talents like Balenciaga and Antonio Castillo, I learned about the immense skill and creativity involved in couture work. Today, I apply some of that same detailing and artistry in my own designs,” De la Renta mentioned on his website. What really put his name on the map was when he was promoted on Elizabeth Arden’s label.

Years of working with fashion’s greatest names finally paid off. In 1965, the house of Oscar De La Renta’s ready-to-wear label was created. His Latin American inspired vibrant garments and luxurious fabrics were finally available for women. Combining his Latin American passion for vibrant colour, his European-trained eye for luxurious fabrics and embellishments and his unique understanding for all things feminine, his line—identified by its delicate silk prints, use of ruffles, soft silhouettes and vibrant palette—soon became synonymous with casual luxury. The label remained a favourite among the press and stars since its creation. As a womenswear designer his mission is to make women look and feel good. “I have always felt my role as a designer is to do the very best I can for a woman to make her look her best. Fashion is only fashion once a woman puts it on,” the designer said on his website.

De La Renta’s designs do not come cheap. His clothes and bridal gowns can be expensive. Ask Mr. De La Renta himself who his customers are and he replies: “All the women who can afford to buy my clothes! My customers are successful working women. They might be spending less at the moment, but my approach is that fashion must always be optimistic, and that a woman will always be enticed by beautiful clothes,” the designer said in an interview with vanityfair.com.

Women of means couldn’t get enough of his distinctly modern yet romantic looks, and for those who couldn’t afford his gowns, he offered a scent. His first perfume debuted in 1977. Oscar de la Renta dreamed of creating a perfume that captured the joy and sophistication of his fashion designs. In 1977, he created his signature fragrance OSCAR, a celebration of women, a timeless and feminine floral bouquet in inspired by the lush gardens of Oscar’s childhood in Santo Domingo.

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The tropical island of Santo Domingo has been and always will be Oscar de la Renta’s biggest inspiration. Full of rich vibrant colors, flowers and sunshine; his homeland plays a big part in his color palette. Oscar’s collections are well known for being very bright and colorful and full of life. His spring 2012 ready to wear collection was very upbeat which could be seen in the bright silk taffeta ball gowns. But this is of no surprise since De La Renta is well known for his bold colors and prints. When designing his collections the designer keeps in mind a woman for whom is creating a garment. The woman that he was designing for in the 60’s has changed greatly. Today he designs for the career woman, the woman who has dreams and loves life.

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From OSCARPRGIRL’s instagram

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Marie Larrory

Mario Testino-Peruvian Fashion Photographer

Mario Testino is a Peruvian fashion photographer.  He study economics at Universidad del Pacifico (Pacific University) in Lima, Peru.  Then, he went to London to study photography.  Meanwhile living in a hospital in London he worked as a waiter and sold portfolios to wannabe models.  After Testino was chosen to photograph Princess Diana for the Vanity fair issue of 1997, his career skyrocket and he was employed by the royal family ever since.  He has also done spreads for Vogue, Gucci, Michael Kors, Dolce and Gabbana, V just to name a few.  The celebrities he has shot fashion stories are Lady Dian, Prince William and Kate Middleton, Madonna, Kate Moss, Giselle Bundchen Elizabeth Hurley and many more.

His campaigns are highly exotic, bright and polish which have made of him an exquisite and well know photographer of the fashion industry.  The popularity he has with designers and fashion editors in the couture scene, it has helped him to portrayed Kate Moss in a Peru-tiful shooting campaign for this year April’s Vogue Paris.  He has also done charitable work including the Elton John AIDS foundation, Save the children and he will soon open a nonprofit organization to show Peruvian art.  Hopefully his polish taste and beautiful pictures will help him explore and show the Peruvian fashion market not only with European models but with Peruvian models of exotic looks.

Cecilia Morales

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References: http://www.mariotestino.com, http://www.fashiongonerogue.com,  http://www.dailymail.com.uk