Emanuela de Paula for Vogue Brazil January 2011 by Jacques Dequeker

Joanna Elizabeth

/

Published January 5, 2011

Emanuela de Paula is sex on the beach for Vogue Brazil’s January, all black models issue. In front of Jacques Dequeker’s lens, Emanuela wears sheer shirts and sexy shorts on the beach styled by Fabio Ishimoto. (Marilyn NY)







Recent Updates

Taylor Hill Banana Republic Summer Featured

Taylor Hill Luxuriates in Banana Republic Summer 2024 Ad

Banana Republic unveils its summer 2024 campaign with Taylor Hill taking the spotlight. Shot on location in Mérida, Mexico, the ...
Versace Watches Spring 2024 Featured

Versace’s Spring 2024 Watches Have a Timeless Appeal

Versace watches shine in a new spring-summer 2024 campaign, featuring model Camille Chifflot. The campaign showcases two striking timepieces: the ...
Sydney Sweeney Jimmy Choo Featured

Sydney Sweeney is Cali Cool in Jimmy Choo Summer 2024 Ad

Sydney Sweeney exudes effortless style in Jimmy Choo's summer 2024 campaign, 'Road to Joy.' The dynamic advertisements feature the blonde ...
Balmain Hair 2024 Featured

Balmain Hair Showcases Iconic Tresses with a Major Campaign

Balmain Hair marks a milestone in its history with the release of its largest campaign yet, titled Savoir-Faire, celebrating 50 ...
Candice Swanepoel Tropic C April Featured

Candice Swanepoel Rocks Swim Season in Tropic of C’s Latest

Tropic of C, founded by Candice Swanepoel, welcomes the swim season with an exciting new drop. The supermodel brings her ...
Lauren Ralph Lauren Summer 2024 Featured

Lauren Ralph Lauren Summer 2024: Countryside Chic

Lauren Ralph Lauren exudes a relaxed elegance in its summer 2024 campaign, featuring models Blanca Padilla and Cora Emmanuel. Showcasing ...

23 thoughts on “Emanuela de Paula for Vogue Brazil January 2011 by Jacques Dequeker”

    • Too tan? Did you read the resume? “…ALL BLACK MODELS ISSUE.”
      Or let me quote wiki: ” Emanuela de Paula was born to a White Brazilian mother and an Afro Brazilian father.”I am what we call ‘mulata'”. She has stated to be one of the few models to represent Black women in the fashion industry “.

      Reply
    • Too tan? Did you read the resume? “…ALL BLACK MODELS ISSUE.”
      Or let me quote wiki: ” Emanuela de Paula was born to a White Brazilian mother and an Afro Brazilian father.”I am what we call ‘mulata'”. She has stated to be one of the few models to represent Black women in the fashion industry “.

      Reply
    • Interesting!!! Many of the population you call brown is considered black. Unfortunately, Brasil is one of the those countries in racial ignorance and hopefully they will figure it out by 22nd century.

      Reply
    • Interesting!!! Many of the population you call brown is considered black. Unfortunately, Brasil is one of the those countries in racial ignorance and hopefully they will figure it out by 22nd century.

      Reply
    • Interesting!!! Many of the population you call brown is considered black. Unfortunately, Brasil is one of the those countries in racial ignorance and hopefully they will figure it out by 22nd century.

      Reply
  1. We can’t say the majority of brazilians are ”brown”, sure there are a lot, but there are white people as well. We can’t never say something bad from Brazil, or discriminate this country, because there’s no words to descrive how a typical brazilian is, because Brazil is a country where has always been with opened arms to the entire world, that means, there are Italy, France, Africa, Germany, Japan, Russia, China, Greece, Mexico, Thailand, India and etc in there.
    Brazil is actually like the rest of America, it is only poorer than some other coutries. All brazilians are mixed, with a Italian dad and Chinese mom, with a Dutch aunt.
    I really do not understand how people discriminate it, or think people live and act like animals, or that there are only indians and black people inside there, while they’re saying these words, they don’t imagine that their nation, their people was there centuries ago, becoming rich thanks to Brazil, and that a part of their nation are living there.

    Reply
    • Brasil is mix country no one is denying that and the issue isn’t that look at what is considered super model. Who is missing from those picture (brown, mix, black, ect)? Everyone you just mention. So the racial discrimination issues in Brasil is a real and it needs to be address at some point.

      Reply
  2. Well maybe there isn’t that many pretty black models at the agencies. More black models need to be discovered. I have seen pretty stunning black models and I don’t understand why they r not models.

    Reply
    • So it’s that there are no pretty black girls at the agency? Really? Could it be that most agencies don’t have more than three black girls? Could it be that there is a a sizeable portion of the population that can’t see beauty beyond their reflection.

      Reply
  3. Alot of agencies are racist because they get pretty black models all day and week long but they refuse to sign them. The general non-black public wants to keep the stereotype up that black women are ugly especially without white admixture. Everyone on the street tells me I should have been a model, even strangers of all races comment on my model looks. BUT no agency signed me, why? because I truly believe Americans are inherently racist.

    Reply
  4. I would NEVER have guessed that this girl had a white mom, she looks black to me, even East African

    Reply
    •  yup you never see people who look like her hailed for their mixed race beauty, ya know why, because she looks ” just black”, not exotic looking enough. people need to realize that the “mixed race look” extends beyond Halle/Nahla/Mariah Carey/Amber Rose etc. But then they would have to accept that you can’t tell what someone is or isn’t by looking at them, and society doesn’t want to learn that lesson.

      Reply

Leave a Comment