Joséphine de la Baume by Cameron Smith for Oyster #88

Joanna Elizabeth

/

Published August 17, 2010

What’s fashion without a little sacrilege? This seems to be the question posed in Oyster’s August issue as actress Joséphine de la Baume takes to the church and grave yard in provocative looks styled by Mags Crow. In front of Cameron Smith’s lens, Josephine dons a wardrobe of Christopher Kane, Miu Miu, Dolce & Gabbana and more in the dreamy spread.











Recent Updates

Sabrina Carpenter SKIMS Featured

Sabrina Carpenter Channels Retro Style in SKIMS Ad

Sabrina Carpenter steps into the limelight as the new face of SKIMS, highlighting the Stretch Lace and Fits Everybody collections ...
Courreges Spring 2024

Courrèges Spring 2024 Campaign: Floating into the Season

Courrèges introduces its spring-summer 2024 campaign with an ethereal blend of motion and stillness. Photographer David Sims captures the essence ...
Anisa Dagher Bazaar Feature

Anisa Dagher Wears Bold Designs in Harper’s Bazaar Thailand

The March 2024 edition of Harper's Bazaar Thailand becomes a canvas for Anisa Dagher's striking presence, captured by photographer Andrew ...
Strawberry Blonde Hair Color Featured

Strawberry Blonde Hair Color: From Classic to Modern Shades

Strawberry blonde hair color is a beautiful blend of light red and golden blonde tones that exude warmth. This timeless ...
Kaia Gerber DKNY Heart of NY

Kaia Gerber Exudes Cool in DKNY’s Heart of NY Capsule

DKNY's Heart of NY capsule collection celebrates the vibrant spirit that pulsates through the streets of New York City with ...
Ralph Lauren Romance Eau de Parfum

Ralph Lauren Romance Intense Ad: Love & the Outdoors

Ralph Lauren's latest fragrance advertisement for Romance Eau de Parfum Intense welcomes the essence of spirited freedom, capturing the scenic ...

20 thoughts on “Joséphine de la Baume by Cameron Smith for Oyster #88”

  1. All style no content. Effect for effects sake. Trite, poorly executed and without meaning.
    @ Tania – it is not different, this is an overused effect. Every second photographer, devoid of creativity uses this "filter"
    @ vickyleestyle – for God's sake – have an opinion. Don't leave passion out the door.

    Reply
  2. All style no content. Effect for effects sake. Trite, poorly executed and without meaning.
    @ Tania – it is not different, this is an overused effect. Every second photographer, devoid of creativity uses this "filter"
    @ vickyleestyle – for God's sake – have an opinion. Don't leave passion out the door.

    Reply

Leave a Reply to jazzy elizabeth Cancel reply