Vogue USA - 04.2020

(singke) #1

188 APRIL 2020 VOGUE.COM


Table of contents: 26:
On Champion: Crocheted
dress ($7,200) and ivory
dress underneath ($3,190),
made to order; (212)
257-6907. Alexander
McQueen earring, $790 for
pair; Alexander McQueen,
NYC. Bag, price upon
request; bottegaveneta.com.
At right: Hermès bag,
$8,000; Hermès stores.
Tailor, Hailey Desjardins.
36:On Copeland: Bodysuit,
$88: skims.com. In this
story: Tailor, Christy Rilling
Studio. Cover look: 36: On
Abdi: Denim vest, $50; ae
.com. Dress, price upon
request; Saint Laurent, NYC.
Scarf (on head), $640;
similar styles at celine.com.
On Akech: Bra, bustier, and
corset, priced upon request;
Vera Wang, Beverly Hills.
Jeans, $298; diesel.com.
On Gerber: Bolero jacket
(price upon request) and
blouse ($1,700); celine.com.
Jeans, $790; select Ralph
Lauren stores. Manicurists,
Dawn Sterling and Yuko
Tsuchihashi. Tailor, Francisco
Chaydez, Martin Keehn,
Christy Rilling Studio
V Life: 62: Manicurist, Lisa
Jachno. Tailor, Susie’s
Custom Designs. 68: On
Edgar-Jones: Top ($3,120)

and skirt ($2,250); prada
.com. On Mescal: Sweater,
$300; acnestudios.com.
Pants with belt, $915; rochas
.com. Tailor, Trish December.
78: Jacket ($2,490) and
jumpsuit ($1,850); Lanvin,
Beverly Hills. Manicurist,
Ama Quashie. Tailor, Carson
Darlin-Blair.
BLUE PLANET
117: On Wen: Chambray
shirt, $78; jcrew.com. Jeans,
$205; agjeans.com. On
Summers: Jacket, $1,250;
marineserre.com. Blouse,
$1,065; victoriabeckham
.com. Skirt, $60; mango
.com. 118: Leather jacket
($6,400) and jeans
($590); pacorabanne.com.
Robert Lee Morris for
Andy Warhol necklace,
price upon request;
robertleemorrisgallery.com
for information. Pamela Love
sterling-silver-and-lapis ring,
$210; pamelalove.com.
Ale Bremer silver ring, $120;
alebremerjewelry.com.
119: Denim top, price upon
request; modaoperandi.com.
T-shirt, $30; bananarepublic
.com. Skirt, $1,850; Dior
stores. Sandals, price upon
request; prada.com.
121: Jacket ($6,540) and
tank top ($115); Bergdorf

Goodman, NYC. Jeans,
$525; dsquared2.com.
122: Blouse ($1,200) and
jeans ($1,800); marcjacobs
.com. 123: Jacket ($1,295)
and flared jeans ($525);
fwrd.com. Sandals, price
upon request; prada.com.
124: On Mor: Jacket, $80;
gap.com. Dress, $1,995;
victoriabeckham.com. On
Piekarska: Blouse, $2,990;
Saint Laurent, NYC. Jeans,
$225; 7forallmankind.com.
On de Vinzelle: Vest, price
upon request; select Miu Miu
stores. Blouse, $1,750; celine
.com. Jeans, $79; wrangler
.com. On Grikaite: Suede
shirt, $2,045; blumarine
.com. Jeans, $450;
shopredone.com. Etro ring,
$336; similar styles at Etro
stores. David Yurman signet
ring, $2,700; davidyurman
.com. Pyrrha sterling-silver
talisman ring ($282) and
sterling-silver signet ring
($367); pyrrha.com. 125:
Dress, $2,690; Alexander
McQueen, NYC. 126: Dress,
$460; Bloomingdale’s
stores. Sandals, $940;
celine.com. 127: Top, $1,073;
matchesfashion.com. 128:
Vest, price upon request;
rag-bone.com. Dress, price
upon request; Saint Laurent,
NYC. 129: Dress, $1,070;
farfetch.com. Scarf, on head,
from New York Vintage,
$125; New York Vintage,
NYC. Etro earrings, $510;
similar styles at Etro stores.
Necklaces, $425–$725;

jewelsarts.com. Bag, $2,350;
prada.com. Celine by Hedi
Slimane belt, $520; similar
styles at celine.com. Stephen
Dweck cuff bracelets
($2,685–$3,835) and ring
($985); Neiman Marcus
stores. Giles & Brother cuff
bracelets, $95–$135;
gilesandbrother.com. Pyrrha
rings, $282–$367; pyrrha
.com. Boots, $1,695; Saint
Laurent, NYC. 130–131:
On Sun: Cardigan, $598;
toryburch.com. Jeans,
$228; motherdenim.com.
Hat, $1,200; gucci.com.
On Bastas: Jacket, $2,175;
Balmain, NYC. Celine by
Hedi Slimane blouse, $1,700;
celine.com. Jeans, $239;
frame-store.com. Celine by
Hedi Slimane bracelet,
$750; celine.com. Saint
Laurent by Anthony
Vaccarello bracelet, $495;
Saint Laurent, NYC. On
Sanchez: Blazer ($2,600)
and pants ($990);
gabrielahearst.com. On
Choi: Jacket ($495) and
skirt ($395); marcjacobs
.com. Boots, $2,010; select
Louis Vuitton stores. On
Ewers: Top, $700; Isabel
Marant, Miami. Denim
shorts, $835; givenchy.com.
On Yuen: Chambray shirt
($295), jeans ($295), and
belt; coach.com. Marc
Jacobs blouse, $695;
marcjacobs.com. Sandals,
$940; celine.com. 132:
Suede jacket ($3,990)
and blouse ($990); select

Michael Kors stores. Skirt,
$198: agjeans.com. Celine
by Hedi Slimane pendant
necklace, $760; celine.com.
133: Denim trench coat,
$1,990; givenchy.com. Hat,
$2,300; gucci.com. Belt,
price upon request; select
Louis Vuitton stores. Boots,
$1,895; Saint Laurent, NYC.
134: Silk top, $1,570; Isabel
Marant, NYC. Skirt, $2,100;
similar styles at celine.com.
Paco Rabanne butterfly
choker, price upon request;
pacorabanne.com.
Kindred Black sterling-silver
mirror pendant, $375;
kindredblack.com. Ippolita
rock-crystal pendant
necklace, $495; ippolita
.com. RJ Graziano vintage
link bracelet, price upon
request; rjgraziano.com
for information. Jewels
bangle (on arm, at right),
$325; jewelsarts.com.
Me&Ro sterling-silver-and-
leather bracelet, $300;
meandrojewelry.com.
Etro ring, $211; similar
styles at Etro stores. Pamela
Love signet ring, $250;
pamelalove.com. Boots,
$2,300; pacorabanne.com
for information. 135: Dress,
$1,995; select Dolce &
Gabbana stores. Earrings
($620) and necklace
($3,190); Alexander
McQueen, NYC. 136: Jacket,
$9,800; Valentino stores.
Michael Kors Collection
blouse, $990; select Michael
Kors stores. Jeans, $268;

In This Issue


for soap dispensers: a machine that turns
salt and water into soap. “We all use it,”
Chambers told me cheerfully. “We’re
non-hierarchical. So there’s no chef, no
servers, no dishwasher.”
When I asked owner Henry Rich why
he opened Rhodora, he’d answered, “I
really wanted to create space where New
Yorkers could go out to eat without par-
ticipating in an unsustainable economy—
either the externalization of carbon or the
externalization of waste.” I tried to pay
close attention to whether my conscience
was assuaged by knowing I hadn’t partici-
pated in either. The verdict? Not assuaged
at all. Which on reflection seems like a tes-
tament to the restaurant’s success. When
I’d asked the executive director of Zero
Foodprint, Karen Leibowitz, to try to
quantify the value of restaurants’ reclaim-
ing wasted food or working to become
carbon neutral, she answered bluntly,
“Restaurants changing one by one isn’t
going to do it. It’s great that restaurants
are buying sustainably. It’s great when a
farmer sees that their neighbor is getting

paid a premium for regenerative agricul-
ture. But the theory of individual change
is just not moving at the pace that we need
to fix the climate. So I think zero waste is
really an important goal, but it can’t be
the end goal.” @

FACE TUNED
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 168
techniques. Before even entering the
treatment room, I have to fill out two
pages of paperwork covering everything
from my menstrual cycle to my bowel
movements, a line of questioning that
is more comprehensive than many con-
versations I’ve had with my primary-care
physician. The customized experience
begins with an edible honey-and-ber-
ry mask that Woods prepares on the
spot—“Your skin loved that,” she says
as she wipes it off—and includes a deeply
relaxing gua sha interlude administered
with cooling spoons and stone tools of
all shapes and sizes.
When I catch a glimpse of myself
post-treatment, my face is bright and

clean, its natural lines defined as if the
angle of my jaw and the plane of my
cheek have been sculpted anew. And I feel
oddly drained—in a good way. “You can
do it once a week,” says Portland, Ore-
gon–based licensed acupuncturist Beth
Griffing Russell, speaking to a big part
of #guasha’s 21st-century viral appeal:
Unlike with Botox, these results can
be replicated at home. Griffing Russell
emphasizes that home gua sha enthusi-
asts should not neglect the neck. “Flick
up,” she instructs, moving her gua sha
tool from one ear to another and around
the base of the skull to stimulate the mus-
cle that connects the back of your head
“to the wrinkles in your forehead.”
A few days later I try the no-frills ver-
sion to alleviate some persistent tension
and fatigue at Oakland Foot Health Cen-
ter, a walk-in storefront not dissimilar
to the medical-massage clinics in Chi-
na serving working-class men on their
lunch breaks, aunties, grandmas, and,
once upon a time, me. “Gua sha has saved
many peasants’ lives,” my masseuse tells
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