Slideshows

Random Pairings

hurleychristie1.jpgI have to say I don’t read Vogue Deutsch monthly. And by read, I mean look at the photos because my foreign language skills are embarrassingly non-existent. But now I’m kind of thinking I may need to start, if only to see the weird, random casting decisions they make for shoots.

This month brings you Lost’s Hurley (Jorge Garcia) and Christie Brinkley, shot by Bruce Weber in Montauk.

Also spotted: tortilla chips, fried chicken, and a Pilates machine. Oh, and some oddly loving glances between two people we never thought we’d see in a picture together. (Not to imply anything at all, it’s really just odd.)

See for yourself after the jump.

Comments

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1

posted by calvinshowblogspotdotcom

Nov 10, 2009 6:22PM

I lurve that last pic! Can't you just hear him mentally saying "...and I'll use this machine when?"

http://calvinshow.blogspot.com

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posted by Amber

Nov 10, 2009 8:31PM

Cute!!

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posted by Peter

Nov 11, 2009 2:00AM

It's like a love story between Hagrid and a vela.

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posted by Keen Observer

Nov 11, 2009 5:58AM

Abby,

You're talking about yourself too much, again. The article would be fine if you took out the first paragraph. Perhaps you should see a therapist if you can't indulge in talking about yourself with your friends. No matter what your solution, however, this fashion blog (or any public terminal) is not the place to do it.

I am sorry that it seems I'm picking on you, but due to domain-name real estate and genuinely good coverage, you edit what is unavoidably the Vogue of fashion blogs. Can you imagine Anna talking about herself in the mag? Perhaps Glenda doing an auotbio (I've Been Fabulous at Every Age!)? Carine waxing poetic on how fabulous her own shoe collection is? You simply would not because oneself is far too easy a subject and too to close a credit; it transforms your writing from a service to an outlet.

Perhaps you should read "The Picture of Dorian Gray" by Oscar Wilde and take notes on how the artist refuses to sell his painting because he puts too much of himself in it. You will also benefit from the author's opinion that "...an artist should create beautiful things, but should put nothing of his own life into them." The context goes further to explain how this in inevitable, but the skill is in the disguise.

Your articles are thoughtful, solid and often refreshing, but burdened by your self-reference. Your readers are begging to share with you, to fall in love your writing and to develop respect for your opinion, but this is done by unquestionable consistency, humble service and tastefully rare self-promotion.

Best,
Keen Observer

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posted by guest

Nov 11, 2009 9:56AM

#3: Harry Potter FTW!!!

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posted by AmandaMichele

Nov 11, 2009 10:04AM

LOL, that last commenter just wrote the worlds longest blog post to tell someone else to talk less. Abby, I enjoy your writing, and that is why I come here, because I like it. If Keen Observer feels differently, perhaps they should go to Style.com, which actually is the Vogue of fashion websites, complete with a blog.

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posted by Emma

Nov 11, 2009 12:41PM

I like a personal spin - you know theres a human behind the article. keep it up!!!

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posted by guest

Nov 11, 2009 1:03PM

re: #4- I thought blogs were the antithesis of normal journalism? whoopee, anyone can have a blog if they want. Fashionista has DEVELOPED into what it is because of who and how.It's self-edited I guess, a bit of free and random commentary on what-have-you.blogs are to journalism what Grace is to Anna? tho certainly without that codependant relationship Anna wouldn't have nearly as much fashion fascism I think. I'm glad she has a peer to balance her.

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posted by Mahalia

Nov 13, 2009 3:28AM

Little late coming to the party on but I still want to comment on Keen Observer's complaint. It would be a profound disservice to her readers if Abby took his/her comments to heart and made her writing less personal. I read a great deal, and certain blogs are at the top of my list not just because they inform/entertain me but because they have a strong point of view. This dovetails most appropriately with fashion, doesn't it? Ideally, fashion speaks with a unique voice, and I expect nothing less from those writing about it. So there, dammit.

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