Skip to content Skip to footer

How Kaia Gerber started designing for Karl Lagerfield when she was 17-years-old

Former supermodel Cindy Crawford’s daughter Kaia Gerber was born into the spotlight as a star with little effort; at 16, she already embodies a supermodel who’s been on the runway for years.

We know that models like Gigi Hadid and Cara Delevigne are working to design their own capsule collection rather than just wear them, so it’s no shock that Kaia would follow suit at this point in her career.

What is shocking is the lack of experience Kaia had when she started her modeling career.  In 2018 she started working with one of the biggest names in fashion history, Karl Lagerfield.

The chief executive officer of Karl’s brand, Pier Paolo Righi, tells VICE,

“When Karl first told us his idea to collaborate with Kaia, we were all excited by the incredible potential and power of bringing their two worlds together. We have been working intensely over the last months with Kaia in L.A. and at our studio in Paris. It was exciting to see her clear vision, passion and engagement, and the collection will definitely inspire many young women.”

WWD recognized the collection as a, “a mix of California cool for day and French sophistication for after dark.”

back to paris

A post shared by Kaia (@kaiagerber) on

The publication also compares the collab to Gigi Hadid’s ongoing one with Tommy Hilfiger.

“Lagerfeld is no doubt betting that the collection will have an effect similar to the one Tommy Hilfiger has enjoyed with the launch of his collaboration with Gigi Hadid. When the Tommy x Gigi line debuted as Hilfiger’s first see-now-buy-now show in September 2016, it generated 900 percent increased traffic to tommy.com in the 48 hours following the show.”

Fellow model Kendall Jenner also praised Kaia as a model earlier that year, telling Love Magazine,

“Listen, we’re all trying to get all our work in now before she hits the scene. When that happens, we’ll all go broke!”

We’re hype to see how far Kaia can take it.

#MoreThanAModel: Meet Elizabeth Pipko, published author and figure skater

Elizabeth Pipko is used to playing multiple roles and that’s because she’s been surrounded by good work ethic and talent since the day she was born.

Her father is an attorney, her mother a touring concert pianist and her grandfather was the late Marc Klionsky, a world-renowned master portrait artist. Growing up, Elizabeth was naturally encircled by a world of artistry.

Now at 23, she’s redefining what it means to be a model by simultaneously bodying two lanes that truly make her unique — she’s a published author and figure skating athlete as well.

The platforms have allowed her to inspire many young girls, who like her, were forced to open one door when another one closed. Now she’s able to do it all, but that didn’t come without its fair share of adversity in chasing her dreams. Since a young age, Elizabeth was taught to work hard.

At the age of 4, she was already performing violin pieces in Merkin Hall, although she admits she was a little forced. Reflecting back on it now, her aversion to the instrument seemed almost obvious. In a meet up at the Kulture Hub office, she told me,

“Now I get why I didn’t like it. I wanted to go to the park and climb the rocks because I thought it was cool. I didn’t wanna play violin. I was stuck with it, everyday, performing at 3 or 4 years old, where I was so nervous. It taught me discipline.”

Elizabeth then discovered skating at the age of 10. By 11, her entire life changed because she truly fell in love with the sport. She was committed.

To prove it, Elizabeth packed up, moved to Florida, changed her diet, and dove into a 10-hour schedule of skating every day. Within those hours, she worked with a private tutor in order to keep up with her studies as she was focused on chasing her dreams to one day compete in the Olympics.

Then, at the age of 15, she would suffer from a debilitating injury. Doctors told her the injury would keep her from skating ever again, but instead of letting that moment stop her, fate would open another door.

Shortly after returning back to New York, she was approached by a modeling agency who wanted to sign her. While it was a confidence builder, it was daunting. Imagine going from a confined homeschool life in Florida to having every move snapped by a photographer.

So, Elizabeth began writing poetry to rid herself of her emotional turmoil. Soon enough the figure skater turned model would have her work picked up by publishers who decided to give her an opportunity.

Elizabeth’s first book, Sweet Sixteen, was written through the eyes of her 16-year old self. Her poetry centered around her crush, paralleling her pain to the ice rink she’d said goodbye to. To sum it up, it was a message any young girl could relate to:

Elizabeth’s second book, About Youwas released 6 years later. This time, Elizabeth’s muse was the same as her first, but left purposely ambiguous, allowing the reader to draw inferences of their own desires.

She describes herself as a tomboy in her younger years, putting up with bullying over her looks. It’s no wonder that when the founder of Vizcaya Swimwear, approached her over their #ImperfectlyPerfect campaign, Elizabeth was all for it.

Bonding over the fact that they’d both dealt with bullying in the past, they came up with the idea for the hashtag. Using social media the two hoped to encourage a positive body image for young women looking at the swimwear’s line that season.

Elizabeth said,

“There are so many people on social media that there isn’t a high chance my social media will connect me with someone who wants to get me a job or something. But I think there’s a higher chance through a campaign, or talk of my skating injury that a young girl will see that and think ‘I’m coming back from an injury’ or ‘I shouldn’t be ashamed of this stretch mark.'”

Elizabeth has now modeled for the likes of DT Magazine, Maxim, and Esquire with more and more opportunities presenting themselves along her journey.

In experiencing everyday, regular life things like going to school, getting a job, hanging out with friends, or dating, Elizabeth realized that nothing made her feel the way skating did. She started re-training for figure skating a year and a half ago.

During her first couple sessions, she found herself too scared to jump because she was having flashbacks. Still every day, she pushed herself to work harder and renounced her love for figuring skating. Elizabeth continued,

“I’m literally obsessed with a sport. A) I’m going to have to retire eventually so I’m always going to have to say goodbye. B) I do this thing I love that breaks my bones. I’ve literally had a concussion, a head injury, I broke my femur, I hurt my ankle, my other ankle, I tore my ankle. I’ve broken every toe, my tailbone 4 times… And I keep going back.”

🧜🏻‍♀️

A post shared by Elizabeth Pipko (@elizabethpipko) on

Though it’s difficult to believe in yourself at times, having confidence is the main key to keep it going, no matter what obstacles you’ve faced. As far as external opinions go, the only one that matters is your own.

“Throughout it all, ‘Never give up.’ Everyone says it, but it’s true. It feels really good to be proud of yourself. Do what you want to do and don’t listen to anybody else. There are so many people in my family who I love and still love that claim to love me but tell me not to skate. People who tell me, ‘This is stupid, what’s the point?’ The amount of happiness that it’s brought me that people would have taken away from me — not on purpose — but just by trying to give their opinion when in my heart I knew what I wanted to do. I could’ve been miserable. Only do what you feel in your heart and don’t surround yourself with anyone who tells you otherwise. Life is so short. Anyone who tells you not to do what you want to do, you don’t need that.”

On top of all that, Elizabeth also goes to the Harvard Extension School and is majoring in Law while balancing her modeling career.

#bts shooting for @vizcayaswimwear

A post shared by Elizabeth Pipko (@elizabethpipko) on

For girls looking to get into the modeling industry, she sheds some wisdom through her own experiences on set. With her current and future modeling career at hand, she has plenty of advice to the next generation of girls just like her.

Especially for young models, she offers some of her own thoughts and experiences that she hopes others will learn from. Elizabeth stresses choosing your comfortability over a paycheck saying,

“Decide what you’re comfortable with before you start and don’t change your mind. There’s a lot of pressure at a photo shoot and a photographer says, ‘Would you do this topless,’ or ‘Would you shoot in this?’ In the moment it’s going to be really hard to decide because there’s going to be a lot of pressure, you’re going to want to please the client, so make sure you decide beforehand. Don’t do anything you’re not comfortable with, don’t do anything you wouldn’t be comfortable sending to mom and dad. Make sure that you’re okay with it, or you’re going to regret it.”

As for her future in figuring skating, Elizabeth hopes that one day she can coach full time. She shared the most important piece of advice she’s learned thus far, advice that can be applied throughout multiple career paths.

“Don’t be scared to fail. If someone fails in Basketball, you dropped the ball, whatever. If someone fails in figure skating, you’re a little girl by yourself on a giant ice rink, people watching, you’re on your butt, everybody knows. You can’t be afraid to fail. You have to prepare yourself to either laugh at yourself or be proud of yourself — whatever it takes. You can’t be afraid to fail, because you’re going to fail at skating. It’s slippery, it’s ice. Just be prepared. It’ll only make you stronger, just know it’s going to happen.”

Women are officially more educated than men, still make less bread

For the first time in history, women are more educated than men.

A 2017 Brookings study has revealed that women have surpassed their spouses by a whopping 25.3%. Though the spike in education has been significant, women are still falling behind on wages.

https://giphy.com/gifs/rihanna-riri-gif-ayFx08jFjgjPa

The chart also indicates a racial disparity between men who were less educated than their wives, but Brookings said they would post a separate thread on that next week.

“The marriage gap, fueling an income gap.”

According to Wendy Wang, Sociologist and Demographer at University of Maryland who conducted the research, though women are marrying down the educational list, they are “continuing to ‘marry up'” in terms of income.

The study also showed a prominent inconsistency between men and women who have just started their careers at the same time.

Resting Bitch Face GIF - Find & Share on GIPHY

On the bright side, there has been a slight increase in wages among women with four-year degrees. The “economic value of education has risen”, according to CNBC, though going to college continues to suck your wallet dry for many years after.

The largest noted problem standing between women and our hard-earned wages? Being wives and moms.

Wang tweeted the statistics of another study yesterday, showing that one of the most important issues facing families was being a parent within a family.

The report also showed that in 2015, there were only 20% of husbands that had more education than their wives, but 67% of husbands earned more.

“In fact, regardless of how men’s education compares to their wives,’ husbands still end up having an edge on earnings.”

IFS reports that women have less financial gains since the 1990s since women tend to seek a higher standard of living. Due to a lessening of earnings by women, women have less financial advantages over the household compared to men. This is a problem we’ve known has existed for a while, but we have not gotten to the root cause of it.

https://giphy.com/gifs/gtkmm-tyler-perry-shemar-moore-XWILzImeLIYbm

The Center For American Progress has proven that college degrees don’t help increase income for men or women.

“Across every college sector and level of selectivity, women who received federal aid had lower annual earnings 10 years after entering higher education than the annual earnings of their male peers only six years after entering.”

While reports have shown that men are also “marrying up” from an educational standpoint, a large 74% of adults fall into the category of “assortative mating,” meaning couples share a similar degree. 54% of marriages exist between adults with a shared high school diploma.

On another interesting note, only one in ten marriages are between two college graduates. That’s only 9%. Could it be because graduate students are most likely drowning in debt twice as much as the typical four-year degree?

Diary Of A Mad Black Woman GIF - Find & Share on GIPHY

Though we understand being a mother is what limits us in our career paths, the question we should be asking: Is it because we’re forced to, or is this a natural inclination? Are women the cause of their own problem, or is there a larger force that is holding us back?

Once we get to the root of the cause, it should be easier to figure out our next step to successfully eliminating the gap.  

Akua Naru celebrates Black culture, feminism and pridefulness in ‘The Blackest Joy’

Akua Naru grew up with music surrounding her entire life. Originally from New Haven, Connecticut, the now-worldwide singer frequently attended church, where music, dance, and community became a thriving, integral component in all her inspirations.

As a child, Akua became versed in many artistic channels of creativity. Poetry and short stories run through her veins, as they’ve contributed to her unique style of hip-hop.

Her hybrid-sounding singles normally feature resonating jazz behind a chorus of melodic vocals, where Akua raps lyrics visiting the minority lens of the highs related to Black female empowerment. This is most evident in her latest album, The Blackest Joy.

The Blackest Joy was worked on for nearly two years before it was released. During the process, Akua was touring, lecturing, speaking, learning and reflecting on her life in its entirety. She’s been involved in teaching workshops, holding conferences, academic committees, and concert performances. She brings her community together through the lessons she believes she is indebted to pass along.

Akua has been, and remains, an independent artist. Now on her fourth project, her albums are signed with her own label, The Urban Era, and are all available worldwide. In an interview with Kulture Hub she told me,

“The whole process took me about a year and a half. I was touring a lot, lecturing. Spending more and more time on the continent. Reflecting. Carving space in my personal life for Joy. You can hear all of that on this record.”

Akua, who’s also considered an activist and poet, as well as a musician, is one of the first people to place herself in altruistic social work, working towards a bigger vision.

Her music ties with her purpose, empowering those around her to work towards something greater, from holding healing circles and open discussion workshops in Senegal to sold out concerts in Europe. She told me,

“I do a lot of work with women and young people on the Continent. I taught at the Ahfad Women’s University in Khartoum. One project which lays on my heart was a group of women artists I worked with in Sudan. Through using the genre of hip-hop to address critical social issues and to raise awareness while centering sisterhood… we were all transformed. So much of that experience lives with me today. So much of it was rich and private and can’t be shared. It was just for us. This was a revelation that the work I am doing is transformative for both myself and others.”

Akua’s belief in unified womanhood can be found in every one of her songs. Her preceding album, The Miners Canary, spoke from a “darker” place. The Blackest Joy, however, steps into the light and shines on the blessings of Black culture.

The track “Serena” admires the beauty and power of being a woman, taking the listener through a colorful spiral of imagery, celebrating Black femininity.

Lost in the fever, got me queening like Serena, swinging like Venus, queening like Serena

“My Mother’s Daughter” starts off a musical number turned into a discerned narrative finding your way through the veil of womanhood through West African spiritual roots.

Living in an era where hip-hop Queens have slowly started the climb to their claim to fame, Akua sees the changes that have begun rising. Her music is never limited to one form of expression alone, playing with different sounds and managing her jumps into different styles of musical mesh.

Akua’s work has been recognized by those looking to represent the life of Black culture. In April, Akua found out she was accepted into the Nasir Jones Fellowship at Harvard, where she will be working on The Keeper Project, an “online multimedia archive” for Black women in hip-hop. Akua commented,

“We live in a patriarchy. The music industry is a microcosm of the larger structure. We have a lot of work to do to get free.”

Akua’s album is a fresh escape from the negative and a step into a more positive hallmark we take for granted.

With so many different messages assorted into 11 songs, her music is able to compel her audience into natural submission of conjoined harmony and peacefulness, driving forward the dream of equality in the voices of women in hip-hop. Akua explained,

“The new album The Blackest Joy was released this April 2018. The music is so pregnant with so much that we still have so much work to do within this album alone. I’m working on film. I’m writing a lot. Recording new music. All of this to say, there’s a lot underway.”

For young artists looking to step into the domain of the rap genre, Akua says to stay true to knowing yourself, above all else.

“Real simple. There is power in being yourself. Stay true to you first and last. The trend will fade. The curtains close. The applause will die down. You have to be committed to knowing who you are with and without it.”

Stream Akua Naru’s The Blackest Joy here:

french rap

F*ck with French rap: 5 hip-hop artists from France you should be bumping

French rap is greatly underrated and an obscure subculture within the rap game. The emergence occurred shortly after our own hip-hop legends rose from a misconstrued edge of music, introducing us to the genre.

French hip-hop has a slightly shorter history than trendsetting American rap, and a smaller following.

French rap started in the banlieues of Paris about 30 years ago, but was cast out as a fad that would eventually die down by a large portion of the population.

In the banlieues lay the same issues that plague our hoods and ghettos; Violence, murder, injustice, drugs, street crime, racial division.

A movement had begun, and anger was the fuel of it.

“Funny thing is, even though rap was pioneered here in the states, France has been a close, unheralded second since the early 80s.”

Since the late 1980s, French rap has been in line with our American flow, watching the rise and fall of their own era legends. American influences such as NWA, who were releasing singles like “Fuck Tha Police” that spoke of the harsh realities minorities faced in inner cities and low-income neighborhoods.

French rap quickly became a political outlet and developed its own following, where rappers talked about the racial differences that affected both France and Africa at the time.

The Noisey Guide to French Rap lays out the different branches of music, breaking it down into the main five groups: French Trap, Conscious Rap, Street Rap, Variety Rap, Nice Kids, and Weirdos.

Each genre lives up to its name, French Trap’s normally heavier bars are quick in reliving the everyday life of a Frenchman over a trap beat, Nice Kids and Weirdos a newly developed multi-section free form.

In 2017, some idols have remained relevant and regarded highly as the OG rappers of their time, while others have surfaced with a new wave of art and expression.

PNL

PNL (Peace and Loves) consist of French-Arab brothers Tarik and Nabil Andrieu who have been around the music scene for a couple of years now. They have released three albums so far, their third being their biggest hit, Dans La Légende, selling over 600,000 copies worldwide.

In the midst of the 2016 Parisian protests regarding labor laws and the series of 2015 Paris terrorist attacks, the outcry of the French people rang clearly throughout the streets. Among the younger generation of millennials, PNL spoke to the entirety of France and the world.

“Le Monde ou Rien” – “The World Or Nothing” became something of a tribute. France stood in solidarity, moved by the tragedies and hardships that impacted the country within a matter of months, both economically and socially.

The song is one example of PNL’s influence on the generation that can appreciate and shadow the current wave of rap that the band depicts.

Though the origin of French rap focuses on politics, PNL’s casual vibes speak to what is an otherwise politically uninhibited youth.

Even if you don’t know what PNL is saying, it’s easy to follow and enjoy their music.


Booba

Booba, born Elie Yaffa, is considered the Kanye West of French rap.

Bodying the “Gangsta Rap” of the hip-hop game, Booba’s music mostly focuses on darker themes that mirror influencers of the ’90s hip-hop game, such as Biggie and Tupac.

In the ’90s, Booba formed Lunatic, a rap duo with Ali, a French rapper from Morocco. However, Lunatic didn’t live up to the OG’s standards.

Booba went on to make “six solo albums, four mixtapes, four platinum records, six gold records,” as well as became the most legally downloaded artist in France. Booba is one of the most revered rap legends in France today.

His most recent stuff has been a little bit more culturally mainstream, and still catchy, and retains his presence as the original rap God.


Oxmo

Oxmo is one of the pioneer “vet” rappers that’s worked alongside Booba in the ’90s era of hip-hop.

Born in Mali, Oxmo is considered one of the original MC’s of French hip-hop before he moved to Paris as a child. Living in the city, he was exposed to a lot of violence. This carried over into his rap career and became a huge influence on his music.

Oxmo and Booba worked alongside one another, as they were both part of Time Bomb, the rap and hip-hop collective made up of the best French rappers of the 90s.

Pretty much any piece of French rap after 1995 or 1996 was upended: There is clearly a before and after Time Bomb. French rap was no longer just words put over music, where people were happy spitting rhymes as fast as possible.

“We wanted to wow our buddies,” Oxmo tells Noisey, “We were talking to each other [on the track].”

The formation of Time Bomb was monumental for the stream of hip-hop in the country.

The group’s significance brought together the best rappers in the game, taking rap from newly discovered conscious poetry to a raging battle of who was the greatest and who had the most important thing to say.

From then on, it was a question of accentuation, pacing, intonation—in brief, rhythm and flow. There was no longer a goal of making so-called poetry or of summing up the political history of France in six bars: French rap had finally discovered technique. It was a like a bunch of house painters had suddenly found themselves looking at Michelangelo.


Suprême NTM

Suprême NTM, which stands for “nique ta mère” (fuck your mother) have been rapping since 1989. They are comprised of Joey Starr and Kool Shen.

Since their very early rise, the two have released 6 successful albums and have signed with Sony entertainment.

They cover various topics of racism and racial inequality that affect France and have played around with different kinds of types of rap, changing their music styles up often. From the Culture Trip:

‘J’appuie sur la Gâchette’ (‘I Pull the Trigger’), a song about suicide, was censored on French TV channels, leading French radio stations to boycott the group’s music. ‘Pose ton Gun’ (‘Put Down Your Gun’) on the other hand, an anti-violent song rather unusual for the group, sampled American singer Bobby Womack’s ‘And I Love Her.


Gradur

Gradur, full name Wanani Gradi Mariadi, is of Congolese origin and is currently bodying the trap scene. From High Snobiety:

He entered the military at a young age, and starting writings lyrics only after he broke his leg in three places. He struggled for a break early in his career (no pun intended), before his videos were shared on Facebook by other high-profile artists in the scene.

He’s been described as France’s “Greatest Trap Ambassador.” Gradur’s topics are what you’d typically find in a trap song; “money, muscles, drugs, weapons, big cars, swimming pools, palaces and yachts,” but his own developed rap freestyle, Sheguey, is easy and fun to bump to.

“When Booba, Hifi, and Hill G found themselves behind the mic together, each wanted to surpass the other, and the result sent them into the stratosphere,” writes Noisey, referring to a few of Time Bomb legends.

While French rap has surpassed the conscious rap era, focusing less on the political issues of the country, the scene remains just as important to the geniuses of the current and upcoming generation.

French hip-hop is thriving and alive, ripe and ready to be discovered by the world; hopefully, we’ll watch the scene mature and get the global reputation it deserves soon.

Issa Rae’s 7 keys to success as a black woman in Hollywood

The issue of cultural appropriation has followed Issa Rae throughout her entire life.

Born in Los Angeles, California to a doctor father and a teacher mother, Rae spent her childhood in Potomac, Maryland, named the richest town in the United States in 2013. It’s safe to say Issa felt anything but black.

Her parent’s affluent lifestyles affected her middle and high school career as well. As her family had moved to Los Angeles when she was in the 6th grade, Issa attended a primarily all-Black school, but never felt “Black” enough, Issa shares in a 2011 Essence interview.

“It was jarring to be berated for ‘acting White’ when I was placed in a predominantly Black middle school in Southern California. I was also chubby, into boys who weren’t into me, and tried too hard to fit into this ‘blackness’ I was supposed to be.”

Issa attended Stanford University, where she majored in African American Studies. After graduating, she used YouTube as a platform to launch her successful comedy series, The Misadventures of An Awkward Black Girl in 2011. The show was so successful, it won a Short Award for Best Web Series the following year, and eventually became the HBO spinoff, Insecure.

The work that it took in between was something that only Issa knows.

Issa Rae’s talents have now extended beyond her web series. She has since become a well-known activist, actress, director, producer, and writer, and has a social media following of over a million people. Forbes also listed her on their 30 under 30 for Hollywood Entertainment.

Issa has worked across the industry field, even developing a 90’s L.A Drama with Turner House author Angela Flournoy, and becoming the new face of Cover Girl. She has also just finished writing her first movie, the drama The Hate U Give, based on the Angie Thomas best seller.

It’s safe to say Issa isn’t limiting her creative options. She continues to dominate any project she’s taken on, though developing and producing series seem to be her forte. Insecure has had two successful seasons so far, and the writers are working on the third season currently.

Over the years the world has watch Issa develop with her content, making a name for herself that is heard and recognized by all. Issa is the warrior we need in today’s society, not only for the film industry, but for women everywhere.

Idols like Issa remind us that it’s okay to feel different from the masses. Through her own experiences of not fitting in anywhere in her life, Issa has inspired a generation of girls who can relate to her natural story telling.

Surely Issa will continue to thrive in all sectors of her career and impact women everywhere. Her image and message is prevalent in all her productions; Being the best you is all you can do. And thanks to Issa, it’s a wonderful reminder.

Rihanna’s most savage moments that proves she’s the biggest boss

Rihanna is just known for being the baddest bitch. She’s hot, she’s super talented, and she goes about her day, no fucks given.

The superstar singer, influencer, and award-winning philanthropist has proved time and time again that she’s a savage.

She’s started scholarship-program non-profits, built oncology centers in her home country of Barbados, and was honored by Harvard as the Humanitarian of the Year in 2016. Recently, Rihanna launched her new Fenty Beauty collection, inspiring and empowering women throughout the world through makeup.

Over the years, she’s had no problem being open with her audience, she doesn’t alter her personality for anyone, and has proved time and time again that the force of RiRi isn’t one to be fucked with.

Everyone can learn a thing or two from Rihanna. In a world where bullshit is entirely too prevalent, it’s best to keep your cool, speak your mind, and react in your most composed manner.

And we’ve seen some pretty priceless reactions from RiRi throughout the years, but in honor of her non-stop badassery, Kulture Hub has put together a video of Rihanna’s most savage moments.

“Tell her your damn self if you know her,” was the first laugh I’ve had today, and we agree with you Rihanna, being asked about your relationship status in an interview is pretty lame.

What is Fashion Nova? The shopping brand that took over Instagram

Everyone knows the name Fashion Nova. Nowadays, it’s rarer if you haven’t heard of it. Most likely, you’ve scrolled past a curvalicious Insta-hottie rocking one of the brand’s body-hugging pop-colors on your newsfeed.

The company’s growth has been described as “explosive” by founder Richard Saghian, who said that within the past year, the site has had 75% of its user traffic return to shop again within 90 days.

Although the brand has an active social presence, the most attractive part aisthe low-cost pieces and outfits.

Over the short three years, the company has been around, Fashion Nova has become so much more than a retail brand. Today, it can be considered a statement of activism.

It’s hard enough finding decent clothing, and everyone has their own preference on what types of clothing match them best, Fashion Nova offers styles that flatter any type of body, even accommodating styles that fit pregnant women.

Spring time vibes 🌺 #novababe

A post shared by Stephanie Villalobos 🌶 (@stephvillastyle) on

Saghian shared his thoughts on Fashion Nova’s resolve, and how its mission includes discontinuing the idea that revered fashion authorities come only from the runway.

“The concept is that the runways are dying. If you think about it, why did they have runways before? Because there was no internet. People are now looking at their feed for fashion inspiration more than they are the runways.”

And though Fashion Nova hasn’t been the first to capitalize on this market, the product line is able to offer customers something others haven’t. Known for its active social presence, what attracts costumers most is the low-cost, affordable clothing.

Working with over 500 sewing factories, 80% of Fashion Nova products are made in LA. Since it’s such a high volume of consumers, the company launches 500 new pieces a week, offering their audience a variety of garments, accessories, shoes, beauty accessories, and more. Dresses and jeans don’t cost more than $50, and shirts can be found as low as $5. A 2-day flat rate shipping only costs $6.

Fashion Nova is known for its onboarding of some of the hottest Instagram models and celebrities out there.

With over 3,000 active ambassadors, the brand has partnered with trend-setting influencers like Cardi B, Kylie Jenner, Nicki Minaj, and Amber Rose to vouch for the company and gain loyalty to their fans, increasing revenue, and has been noted for on-boarding the flyest trailblazers in the game, like Frankie Bikini’s Sophia Jamora.

lowkey shivering fit: @fashionnova

A post shared by Sofia Jamora (@sofiajamora) on

Fashion bloggers across the internet are also rejoicing at being able to constantly change up their outfits without breaking the bank.

In some cases, Fashion Nova will even pay people to advertise their clothing for them or send them new things to try out. Bloggers can then offer their followers a discount code, instantly gaining trust and notoriety by proxy.

At this point, it feels like Fashion Nova is less about fashion and more about showing women of all kinds the options available for them.

The company has amalgamated a bigger vision into one site: No matter who you are or what you look like, no matter how small or large, no matter what stage your body is in, Fashion Nova’s clothing will have you looking very fly for very little.

5 female entrepreneurs on how they turned their passions into careers

For the working woman, life can sometimes be stressful.

There’s always something to do. Whether it’s tending to your family, your friends, your social circle, or most importantly, yourself. Being a woman and pursuing a career hasn’t exactly been the smoothest ride since the dawn of time.

Joanna Lau, founder and CEO of Jemma products, knows exactly what that feels like. During an intimate panel discussion at the Jemma headquarters, five female entrepreneurs and founders discussed their journeys, from the birth of their ideas, the work they put into executing them, and the eventual launch of their companies.

#mytwocents ❤

A post shared by Joanna Lau (@joannallau) on

If you’re a working woman who’s always on the go, you’ve probably heard of Jemma handbags. They come in all different shapes and sizes, from gym bags to totes, backpacks, wallets — you name it, Jemma has it on deck.

A quick scan of the Jemma website tells you all you need to know about the products, the convenience, the variety and the audience. Still, getting Jemma to the position it is now wasn’t an easy feat.

The panel shared it all, how their ideas came about, how they operate their businesses when they first realized their businesses were a success and the trials they faced throughout their vision. They bought forward topics that often arose when interviewing entrepreneurs, but it seemed that all the founders held different opinions.

There are a couple of questions to broach when figuring out how to structure your new business. Details in things like money, time, audience, partnerships are essential deciding factors in whether or not you make it or break it.

Here are a few key points to feel out and tackle when first engaging in a new project. If you’re feeling doubtful about your decision, consider these stories as a lesson and guide for your own ideas.

If you’re considering…

An entirely new career

If you’ve been thinking of jumping into a new career but find yourself hesitant since you’ve been working something on a different spectrum, just use Helena Crawley, founder and CEO of SweatStyle, as an example.

Her career started off as a tax associate in New York City. Working long hours as a lawyer was tough, so she found herself at the gym, often exercising to eliminate her stress.

Delving into a healthier lifestyle, she joined a women’s fitness studio to better empower herself emotionally and physically. It was here that she noted the subtle differences in ensemble between women’s workout gear. “There was a disconnect,” she shared. The notice of that little detail was the sole reason she came up with the multiplex of workout clothing that is SweatStyle.

“SweatStyle customizes the gear for you depending on the type of workout or fitness that you’ll be engaged in.”

The company familiarizes you with the different types of workout products that are possible to get you your best fit. While Helena’s original job was focused on the law, the leap from files to fitness proved to be a successful one.


A path of familiarity

If you’re anything like Olivia Landau, the founder, and CEO of The Clear Cut, you’ve been disregarding your career’s calling for too long.

Olivia has always had a part in the jewelry business. Her family has been in it for generations. Growing up, they instilled in her that she should not go into jewelry because they considered it to be a “dying industry.”

After graduating with her BA and working for Tiffany & Co.’s corporate office, she found herself unfulfilled in the corporate sector and turned her passions towards a different direction.

Enrolling and graduating from Gemological Institute of America, she set off on her own venture, starting a company as a private jeweler who picks out and designs diamond rings. Olivia says,

“A lot of people are overwhelmed with hundreds of thousands of options. We get a sense of your preferences, budget, design, and timeline. All diamond rings take about 2 weeks to create.”

Clear Cut first started off as a blog, which caught traction on Instagram. From there, the company grew organically. People began reaching out to Olivia, mentioning how opaque the diamond industry was and how difficult it was to shop for a diamond.

“When you commit to it full time, it’s really different from when it’s a side-hustle. Nothing is the same than by when you live or die on whether this is going to succeed or not.”

Committed to making it easier and more worthwhile for their consumers, the company set out to create bespoke rings, handmade and sold at wholesale prices.


The real importance of networking

Of course, networking is important. Anyone who’s anyone doing anything can tell you that much. But when asked the question by Joanna, a different opinion surfaced.

For Helena, every meeting she has is a new opportunity.

“I think that’s the number one thing you can do for your business. I always take any coffee, lunch or drink meeting that anybody suggest for me, because no matter what, there’s always something that comes out of that conversation. Like a question I hadn’t considered before, or a connection to someone else that may be useful, or just becoming an advocate for your brand.”

She also mentioned that although these connections may not seem useful at the time, they may become evident later on.

“Putting your name out there, making connections and building your brand and down the line letting them know that hey, our brand is 3x the size, you’re much more likely to get a response from them than if you never made that connection in the first place. Many times things have circled back around.”

Estee Goldschmidt, founder, and CEO of the ShopDrop, has a different idea in mind.

Rather than utilizing all of her networking tools, she focuses more on her consumer’s opinions, and heavily sorts out the different types of entrepreneurial relationships available to her, placing a particular case of selective choice on investors.

“There’s networking with other entrepreneurs, which for me is a lifeline. I feel that other entrepreneurs have helped me so much for maintaining sanity, and in terms of exposure and connections, there’s this community and understanding in terms of helping each other. In terms of networking with our users… So. Important. It’s customer discovery every single conversation I have. We’ll get coffee, or jump on the phone and all of our product improvements has come from our user base. In terms of networking with potential investors, I started saying no to those meetings, and they’d be like ‘send the deck and I’ll forward it.’ Initially, I was taking those meetings and then I started feeling like an empty canister, used and discarded.”


Funding

For ShopDrop, an app that links brand engagement through consumer analytics, the most crucial information lies in the hands of the users. Estee says,

“Reaching people and having people find out about you costs money and energy. User acquisition costs money. Most companies start with a blog that people are reading, but aren’t making money off of it, so they decide to create a product with a solid profit market and sell it.”

ShopDrop’s most difficult transition was the aspect of payment. After getting into the NYU Entrepreneurship Accelerator, ShopDrop garnered an audience of over 800 active users, which then grew to 2,000 active users.

“Reaching people and having people find out about you costs money and energy. User acquisition costs money. Most companies start with a blog that people are reading, but because they aren’t making money off of it they decide to create a product with a solid profit market and sell it. Spend tens of thousands of dollars in PR in order to reach their audience ‘organically.'”

But ShopDrop remains self-funded to this day. Estee continued,

“There were moments that were difficult when it came to finances. Sometimes there would be a clear uptake and other days it was much harder to get by.”

When Joanna first started Jemma, she was contemplative on whether or not she would raise money for capital or self-fund her business.

She chose the latter, sorting out which direction to take her business, and was scrappy with money when needed, such as getting her friends to model the product.

“The first question you ask yourself is, ‘Do you want this business to be your business or do you want it to be a business that you sell the next 5 years?’ When you’ve figured that out, then it becomes easier to organically grow your product.”

This year, Jemma will hit $1M in sales revenue.


Taking a risk

For Lia Winograd, Founder and CEO of Pepper, it was the opposite. Lia was excited when she launched the idea for her bra company that gears it’s merchandise to small chested women.

Pepper’s funding came from Kickstarter, more than quadrupling its original goal of $10,000. The official launch of the product was this year, though it’s been in the works since 2017.

Pepper was Lia’s side project after hours and on weekends. She and her co-founder were working for a year on building the company and waiting for the development of the actual product.

Lia also informs us that quitting her job before Pepper’s official launch would have been a bad idea all around.

After Pepper proved successful through consumer spending, it became a question of whether or not the product would be able to deliver, which took yet another six months.


Combating loneliness

“As founder and CEO do you ever feel lonely?” Joanna asked the group. A reactive agreement bursts throughout the room, each woman giving their own take on how to beat the matter.

Discussing the importance of work, life and family balance, Lia mentioned that sometimes, being surrounded by too big a community and balancing a few things at once can also feel overwhelming and that it’s important to prioritize your work-life (and self) in times like this.

“Find your community,” Helena advocates.

“My team has been my lifeline,” Estee follows, sharing a story of how her team helped her get through being rejected from a company accelerator.

A shared trait between them all was the importance they place on their community. Whether it’s your co-founder, family, network, classmates, friends, the people that want to see you succeed are the most important in crucial times, especially when first launching or starting an idea.

As women, we’re gifted with natural abilities that can help overcome arising obstacles; our intuition, our ability to multi-task, the utilization of our femininity to grow new ideas, the list goes on and on.

Whether your business is new, old, small, big, your focus or a side project, the most important lesson is that it starts with you. Focusing on yourself comes first. Once you’ve found your harmonious balance, it seems that everything else falls into place effortlessly.

Amara La Negra is paving the way for Afro-Latina women everywhere

Amara La Negra started on reality television and has taken over media headlines in what seems like an overnight rise to fame.

The beautiful 27-year-old is being talked about constantly, but some are still confused who she is or what she’s done to garner her rapidly growing reputation.

Amara started off on Love and Hip-Hop Miami as an emerging star, repping her home country of the Dominican Republic. By November, she was named Billboard’s new ‘Artist on the Rise.’

Still, there isn’t too much known about Amara yet. Here are some facts about the rising Latina sensation.

She identifies as Afro-Latina

This is so, so important.

Though she wears her Dominican heritage proudly, Amara is still facing backlash regarding her ethnicity.

Anyone watching her can’t deny her fiercely sensual and exotic look. Within the past year, she has been opening up and discussing the struggles of dealing with ignorant people who don’t understand that she is as much Black as she is Latina.

She was even slammed with accusations of wearing blackface and has even been told by a trap producer to look, “A little more Beyoncé. A little less Macy Gray.”

https://twitter.com/DippedInMakeup/status/948295505871884289

In a season 1 premier of Love and Hip-Hop Miami, La Negra opens up about the pressures of the entertainment industry.

“If you don’t look a certain type of way, it’s almost impossible to be taken seriously.”

The good news is that she has taken these negativities and turned them into positive resistance by discussing the issue and becoming the current face of Afro-centric acceptance in the Latin community.

This is a growing theme in media today, with Latin celebrities such as Cardi B getting massive exposure and helping bridge the gap between issues on Latino race relations.


Her best friend is her mother

Nah… Seriously though. When I say her best friend is mother, I mean it. She takes her mother everywhere. To meetings, to trips, even to… dates?

Her mother came to the United States over 20 years ago in hopes of providing her daughter a better life.

Mi Mejor Amiga! My Best Friend! @mamianalamama1 #Mami

A post shared by A M A R A “LA NEGRA” (@amaralanegraaln) on

Since then, she has stuck by her daughter’s side no matter what she’s doing, and provided her with the necessary guidance to progress her career.

She’s mentioned before that her mother is her everything and her entire career is centered around making her mother proud.


She won her first award as a child

Upon recently being called out for having fake dark skin, she gave her haters a big “Fuck You” by posting a video of her walking on stage as a child at a beauty pageant.

Along with being accused of blackface, she was also told she’d been getting melanin shots to keep her color.

“It’s funny that I even have to go through this and show you baby pictures or videos to prove to blogs and people on social media that my skin color is not airbrushed or spray tanned nor do I take melanin shots to be black! This shit is hilarious.”


She landed a multi-album record deal

Right now, she’s focused on her singing career, releasing hit after hit such as the playful “AYY” from 2012 and her latest hit, “Se Que Soy”.

She recently got a deal with Fast Life Entertainment Worldwide and BMG. She told Billboard about her career:

“I’m still in shock! At times, I am caught pinching myself because there is a part of me that still is in awe of being signed to a franchise that will heighten my success. It is a feeling of a different level of hunger because I have prayed for this so much that it feels unreal!”

( AMARA LA NEGRA SIGNS A MULTI MILLION DOLLAR CONTRACT WITH BMG) Hard Work Pays Off! Don’t Let Anyone Put you down! Work hard for what you want because it won’t come to you without a fight. You have to be strong and courageous and know that you can do anything you put your mind to. If somebody puts you down or criticizes you, just keep believing in yourself and turn it into something positive. Thanks to all my fans for all the love and support because you guys are part of my success!!! I want to Thank my Mom @mamianalamama1 for always being there for me @jullianboothe My manager/ Brother/ Friend Thank you sooo much for believing in me from day 1. You and Mami are my Ride or Die! And @thezachkatz The President of BMG thank you for seeing the vision and wanting to be part of my Dream. Thanks to my attorney @mattbuseresq @meccamalone

A post shared by A M A R A “LA NEGRA” (@amaralanegraaln) on

Amara has been working hard to land where she is now, especially since she doesn’t fit the typical “look” of other top music celebrities today. Thankfully, with her team behind her back, she was able to snag a deal with a record company,

“I am humbly honored to have a team that continues to believe in me. Having a pioneer in the music arena like Zach seeing the potential in my musical craft and talent. I am thankful for my team at Fast Life Ent. Worldwide and BMG for this opportunity as an artist. And I cannot wait for my fans to hear my new music.”

In an interview with US Weekly, she discusses how conflicting it is to work in the music industry.

“I’ve had people judge me so many times based off my looks and not off my talent, and I try to be mellow and try to see their points of view and have them understand my point of view. It wasn’t surprising.”

She then goes on to say that the Latin community also “has that mentality,” as does the entertainment industry.

Fortunately, none of these issues have hindered Amara’s climb to the top. As she continues to grow, I’m excited to see the different avenues she’ll take throughout her career. This Latina is a feisty, natural-born star.

Rooting for you, Amara!