This Is Definitely The Most Creative Editorial You've Seen This Year!
Conscious Uncoupling” – A Collaborative Fashion Editorial Celebrating Women’s History Month
This phenomenal editorial is a fashion photo series created to celebrate Women’s History Month and to depict the way women are currently being treated in our society. Shot by Emmanuel Arewa and styled by Kayito Nwokedi, this piece is definitely one to make black history...
See the full editorial here
Power Play
Here he wears peacock colours because he is the peacock. The highflier. The one that shows off all his success at work and in the world. The woman wears red, her heart and love and life. White, her innocence and purity of womanhood she owes to her man. And black, which may mean submission or mourning the life she will never live judging by the expression on her face which is bored and deeply saddened yet gravely accepting of her current lot in life.
Cruel Intentions
Abuse is something women should never go through in relationships.
Come As You Are
The red the woman wears is her heart, her love, her life all over herself because when she presents herself to her man, she is to give him ALL of herself, love, life and all.
The man wears black around his waist. The black symbolizes the power of his manhood. A privilege he “bestows” on the woman which is why he “expects” her to submit herself wholly to his power and privilege.
Master and Muse
This represents the objectification of women. The woman is to be perfect, beautiful. An almost impossible standard. Judging by the man’s position, the woman is the man’s play thing for satisfaction and pleasure. But if you look closely, you can see sadness and pain in the beauty of the woman’s expression.
Don’t Fence Me In
The man is dressed in black which depicts severity, power, machoness. His expression is just as severe, reaching out to feel the pulse of the world. His hair is purple, because he is king and “rightfully so”.
The woman is in red depicting heart, emotion, love. She’s holding on to the man for fear of going at it alone or maybe by social and cultural relegation. The sameness in sartorial garb means regardless of gender or social disposition, we are all the same deep-down.
It’s A Wrap
Credits
Photography/Direction: Emmanuel Arewa | @spotlightpi
Styling/Words: Kayito Nwokedi | @kayito_n
Hair: Bernard Okon | @bernardsmiless
Makeup: Sulaimon Kazeem | @casskoncept
Models: Susan Garland | @iamsusangarland & Melissa Devidal | @mel_devidal
Beauty Retouched: Oluwaseun Omosekejimi | @libartystudios
This phenomenal editorial is a fashion photo series created to celebrate Women’s History Month and to depict the way women are currently being treated in our society. Shot by Emmanuel Arewa and styled by Kayito Nwokedi, this piece is definitely one to make black history...
See the full editorial here
Power Play
Here he wears peacock colours because he is the peacock. The highflier. The one that shows off all his success at work and in the world. The woman wears red, her heart and love and life. White, her innocence and purity of womanhood she owes to her man. And black, which may mean submission or mourning the life she will never live judging by the expression on her face which is bored and deeply saddened yet gravely accepting of her current lot in life.
Cruel Intentions
Abuse is something women should never go through in relationships.
Come As You Are
The red the woman wears is her heart, her love, her life all over herself because when she presents herself to her man, she is to give him ALL of herself, love, life and all.
The man wears black around his waist. The black symbolizes the power of his manhood. A privilege he “bestows” on the woman which is why he “expects” her to submit herself wholly to his power and privilege.
Master and Muse
This represents the objectification of women. The woman is to be perfect, beautiful. An almost impossible standard. Judging by the man’s position, the woman is the man’s play thing for satisfaction and pleasure. But if you look closely, you can see sadness and pain in the beauty of the woman’s expression.
Don’t Fence Me In
The man is dressed in black which depicts severity, power, machoness. His expression is just as severe, reaching out to feel the pulse of the world. His hair is purple, because he is king and “rightfully so”.
The woman is in red depicting heart, emotion, love. She’s holding on to the man for fear of going at it alone or maybe by social and cultural relegation. The sameness in sartorial garb means regardless of gender or social disposition, we are all the same deep-down.
It’s A Wrap
Credits
Photography/Direction: Emmanuel Arewa | @spotlightpi
Styling/Words: Kayito Nwokedi | @kayito_n
Hair: Bernard Okon | @bernardsmiless
Makeup: Sulaimon Kazeem | @casskoncept
Models: Susan Garland | @iamsusangarland & Melissa Devidal | @mel_devidal
Beauty Retouched: Oluwaseun Omosekejimi | @libartystudios
Cool but I see flesh everywhere
ReplyDeletecool ladies
ReplyDelete