It would be infuriating that Natasha Lyonne hasn't fronted a major fashion campaign yet, except the one she finally landed is just so good. As the new face of COS, the actress / director / producer stares down a camera lensed by Mario Sorrenti and styled by Camilla Nickerson. In the images, Lyonne wears a black peacoat and fishnets, framed by a New York rooftop and not the least bit concerned that she's got no pants. As the kids say: She eats.
As I imagine, she also actually eats, and drinks, and smokes, and creates, and has a whole life outside of this fashion racket, which—Lyonne assures me—is the whole point. "I think COS is great because the quality is very nice; very nice, but also, you can go to a store and get it. You can wear it even if you don't have a stylist, or a lot of time to get yourself together. It's like a shortcut to getting it right."
Lyonne calls me en route to work—she's shooting Poker Face, the TV series from Knives Out's Rian Johnson—and since she's way more interesting than I am, I'm gonna get out your way and just tell you what she said.
Lyonne calls me en route to work—she's shooting Poker Face, the TV series from Knives Out's Rian Johnson—and since she's way more interesting than I am, I'm gonna get out your way and just tell you what she said." title="It would be infuriating that Natasha Lyonne hasn't fronted a major fashion campaign yet, except the one she finally landed is just so good. As the new face of COS, the actress / director / producer stares down a camera lensed by Mario Sorrenti and styled by Camilla Nickerson. In the images, Lyonne wears a black peacoat and fishnets, framed by a New York rooftop and not the least bit concerned that she's got no pants. As the kids say: She eats.
As I imagine, she also actually eats, and drinks, and smokes, and creates, and has a whole life outside of this fashion racket, which—Lyonne assures me—is the whole point. "I think COS is great because the quality is very nice; very nice, but also, you can go to a store and get it. You can wear it even if you don't have a stylist, or a lot of time to get yourself together. It's like a shortcut to getting it right."
Lyonne calls me en route to work—she's shooting Poker Face, the TV series from Knives Out's Rian Johnson—and since she's way more interesting than I am, I'm gonna get out your way and just tell you what she said."> |
It would be infuriating that Natasha Lyonne hasn't fronted a major fashion campaign yet, except the one she finally landed is just so good. As the new face of COS, the actress / director / producer stares down a camera lensed by Mario Sorrenti and styled by Camilla Nickerson. In the images, Lyonne wears a black peacoat and fishnets, framed by a New York rooftop and not the least bit concerned that she's got no pants. As the kids say: She eats.
As I imagine, she also actually eats, and drinks, and smokes, and creates, and has a whole life outside of this fashion racket, which—Lyonne assures me—is the whole point. "I think COS is great because the quality is very nice; very nice, but also, you can go to a store and get it. You can wear it even if you don't have a stylist, or a lot of time to get yourself together. It's like a shortcut to getting it right."
Lyonne calls me en route to work—she's shooting Poker Face, the TV series from Knives Out's Rian Johnson—and since she's way more interesting than I am, I'm gonna get out your way and just tell you what she said. |
|
|
| The family is reconnecting. |
|
|
| She thanked fans for supporting a "No Kids Policy." |
|
|
Their husbands are set to attend in military uniform. |
|
|
| The royal family seems to be struggling with how to treat the Sussexes. |
|
|
| There is one famous piece that people are most curious about. |
|
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment