Best in show
British Vogue opens its August 2012 fashion pages with the help of 12 mutts.
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British Vogue opens its August 2012 fashion pages with the help of 12 mutts.
READ MOREBritish Vogue opens its August 2012 fashion pages with a piece aptly titled Best in show. The editorial showcases key pieces from the best A/W collections (from Céline to Gucci, Givenchy and Dior), all hand-picked and styled by fashion editor Francesca Bruns, who focused on this season’s darker undertones. Described as a treasure find of “sultry new palettes of bronze and fern green, decadent fabrics such as damask, and a plethora of grown-up pieces – lounge jackets, tunics and maxi coats included”, the magazine also highlights the inevitable return of the trouser suit.
Shot by Daniel Jackson, fashion photographer extraordinaire and regular contributor to i-D, POP, Numéro, V and V Man; with an impressive selection of fresh new talent (the models, we mean), and some very special guests, 12 carefully selected mutts from NYC-based animal talent agencies, wearing collars and leads by Bottega Veneta and Hermès.
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Photographer Daniel Jackson
Stylist Francesca Burns
Hair Didier Malige
Make-Up Yadim
Models Andie Arthur, Elena Bartels, Mackenzie Drazen, Cora Emmanuel, Madison Headrick, Laura Kampman, Kolfinna Kristofersdottir, Kathryn Kruger, Magda Laguinge, Marie Piovesan, Melissa Stasiuk & Xiao Wen. Riea Romain Set-Design: Max Bellhouse







by Emma Guthrie
From dogs and cats, to owls and tarantulas, Tobias Lang’s photographic series
‘Your Pet and You’ sheds new light on man and their best friends.

Wood grain, pen strokes, felt strips. Over hundred artists have dressed and groomed Gerald, a paper Bracco Italiano, as part of a collaboration led by agency Lazerian. You can check the pack at 60 Reade Gallery during New York Design Week.
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Glowing babies, big hearts, dancing people, barking dogs. Vivienne Westwood once compared the symbolic language of Keith Haring to hieroglyphs. If anything, Keith Haring’s work is pure gut expression. When in Paris, visit the retrospective organised by The Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville in association with Le Centquatre. With more than 250 pictures on canvas and tarpaulins and from subway walls, as well as some truly monumental art pieces, the show is not to be missed. Until 18 August 2013.
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by Meredith Forrester
Susan Sabo’s latest project, I Dreamt of Dogs, helps the California-based photographer to deal with unfinished business.
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by Sophie Gamand
Photographer Sophie Gamand’s world had been filled with bedazzled silk dresses and feathered hats until she ventured into Dead Dog Beach, Puerto Rico. This is her heartfelt account of the experience informing her work to this day.
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Norwegian photographer Andrea Gjestvang wins the Sony World Photography Award for her moving collection of portraits of surviving teenagers of the Utoya massacre. Fifteen-year-old Iselin Rose Borc (featured) recalls: “In the period after Utoya I had a really hard time sleeping. I was afraid of the dark and suffered dreadful nightmares. My mom and I decided that getting a dog might help me, so I got Athene. Now she sleeps on top of my stomach every night.” That’s why they are called man’s best friend.
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Abigail Ahern knows your home needen’t be staid. Combining her love of dogs and decor, these little beauties have it all. Seriously, if household accessories had personalities, they would look like this.
Recommended by Emma Guthrie, Journalist
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by Four&Sons
Ginger and Wiggley, two adopted guinea pigs, inspired Julianna Koh-Blackwell to start documenting pets in their environment. We talk to the award-winning, Sydney-based photographer about the importance of story-telling, her clients and the valuable lessons learned along the way.
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by Sarah McArthur
Plunging into the world of pet ownership is both thrilling and challenging. We speak to Jane Lee of pet and lifestyle company Wildebeest, about making things a bit easier for rookies, designing from necessity, and her love for the local San Francisco Bay Area maker community.
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I am not one for fart jokes and bodily functions. Still, I find Jock Mooney’s sculptures (and his drawings and animation projects) hilarious and subversive. Maybe it is because his work remind me of being a child, freak shows, uncensored fun and, generally, not giving a shit.
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