“Black in Fashion,” a stunning 300-page coffee table book from WWD and Union Square Publishing, doesn’t just focus on the past century’s most influential Black models, muses, designers, photographers, stylemakers and creatives, but it also celebrates how WWD documented each of them. As “the fashion bible” and flagship publication of Fairchild Media, WWD often broke ground with Black-centric fashion news, features, illustrations and photo shoots, and continues to do so to this day. To listen to the podcast click here. Tonya Blazio-Licorish In this episode, Lauren Parker, director of Fairchild Studio, chats with cultural historian and archivist Tonya Blazio-Licorish, the coauthor of “Black in Fashion” and archives editor of WWD and Fairchild Media Group. Blazio-Licorish cites Josephine Baker as the “ultimate influencer,” and not just for her famed fashion moments in the banana skirt, for example, but for how she drove the fashion business forward. “Having a hosiery named Creole Brown, which was the color given in honor of Josephine Baker’s influence on the world stage [in 1925 after she got to Paris], takes her and puts her in a different light than the media’s tropes of her,” she said. Baker’s influence continues into the 21st century, like when Rihanna wore a crystal
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from WWDRecent Stories https://ift.tt/YHU8dGF
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