Marilyn’s New Faces by Louis Christopher | The Block Spring 2010

Joanna Elizabeth

/

Published April 26, 2010

The Block shows us Marilyn Agency‘s most promising fresh faces with a dark and macabre spread published in their spring issue. Photographed by Louis Christopher, Kristina Krivomazova, Hannah Johnson, Josefin Hedstrom, Tetyana McInychuk, Yulia Leontieva, Melodie Dagault, Rel Dade, Chantal Stafford Abbott and Thana Kuhnen wear a mix of vintage garments and powerful accessories from the likes of Givenchy, Park Choon Moo and Longchamp styled by James Worthington DeMolet.











Recent Updates

Behati Prinsloo Adam Levine Featured

Behati Prinsloo & Adam Levine Show Their Love in Jacquie Aiche Ad

Fashion meets love in Jacquie Aiche's latest Rebel Heart collection with married couple Behati Prinsloo and Adam Levine. The campaign, ...
Gucci Lido Summer Featured

Gucci Lido Makes Waves with Summer 2024 Capsule Collection

Gucci dives into the summer season by unveiling the Gucci Lido collection for 2024. Inspired by the idyllic beach clubs ...
Anne Hathaway V Magazine Featured

Anne Hathaway is a Fashion Plate in V Magazine Cover Story

Anne Hathaway graces the cover of V Magazine's V148 Summer 2024 issue in a striking androgynous ensemble that challenges traditional ...
Types of Aesthetics Featured

Types of Aesthetics: Your Guide to the Top 2024 Styles

Style is all about choices, and the different types of aesthetics offer a captivating array of fashion possibilities, each with ...
Sara Sampaio Hunkemoller Swim Featured

Sara Sampaio Dives Into Hunkemoller’s New Swim Ad

The famed Portuguese model Sara Sampaio is the epitome of summer radiance in Hunkemöller's 2024 Own Your Glow swimsuit campaign ...
Ralph Lauren Only Polo Featured

Polo Ralph Lauren Spring 2024: Bright Colors & Relaxed Fits

Polo Ralph Lauren has unveiled its spring 2024 campaign, aptly named Only Polo, showcasing a collection that celebrates vibrant, joyful ...

17 thoughts on “Marilyn’s New Faces by Louis Christopher | The Block Spring 2010”

  1. I'd have to agree on not being able to see their faces…kinda weird, was that purposeful? That the beautiful ones are invisible, so stellar you can't even see what they look like? Seems an unusual approach to making them household names, which I think would be the purpose of focusing on "new faces"…Photography is gorgeous, just think maybe this wasn't the right approach to showcase this talent…

    Reply
  2. I'd have to agree on not being able to see their faces…kinda weird, was that purposeful? That the beautiful ones are invisible, so stellar you can't even see what they look like? Seems an unusual approach to making them household names, which I think would be the purpose of focusing on "new faces"…Photography is gorgeous, just think maybe this wasn't the right approach to showcase this talent…

    Reply
  3. I'd have to agree on not being able to see their faces…kinda weird, was that purposeful? That the beautiful ones are invisible, so stellar you can't even see what they look like? Seems an unusual approach to making them household names, which I think would be the purpose of focusing on "new faces"…Photography is gorgeous, just think maybe this wasn't the right approach to showcase this talent…

    Reply
  4. I'd have to agree on not being able to see their faces…kinda weird, was that purposeful? That the beautiful ones are invisible, so stellar you can't even see what they look like? Seems an unusual approach to making them household names, which I think would be the purpose of focusing on "new faces"…Photography is gorgeous, just think maybe this wasn't the right approach to showcase this talent…

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Jon Cancel reply