Racial diversity in fashion has improved in recent years, but the industry must not treat it like a catwalk trend, British model Naomi Campbell told Reuters in an interview.
One of fashion’s most recognizable faces, Campbell has long spoken of discrimination in the industry where she has worked for 33 years.
The 49-year-old Campbell was the first black model to appear on the covers of French Vogue and Time magazines.
Photo: Reuters
She was also the first black model on the cover of American Vogue’s key September issue.
Asked how the industry had changed, Campbell said: “In so many ways, but most importantly the diversity. It’s finally ... sunken in, but now we hope people don’t think it’s in for a trend, like clothes are in for a season and out for a season, that’s not going to happen.”
“It’s improved absolutely, I can’t say it hasn’t. I do think there’s always more room for improvement .. There’s still some ways to go,” she said, referring to equal pay.
Campbell began her career as a teenager and has modeled for fashion heavyweights, such as Versace, Chanel, Prada, Dolce & Gabbana, among many others. She has also championed African designers and coproduced April’s Arise Fashion Week in Lagos, Nigeria.
Asked if African designers were finally getting recognition, she said: “We’re on our way, we’re not there yet, but we’re getting the platform ... they deserve to have.”
On designer labels improving their green credentials as public environmental awareness grows, Campbell said most brands were “very aware of sustainability.”
“I feel that everyone is consciously aware now and trying to do their part. It’s amazing, you go on set now to do shoots and it has to be a non-plastic shoot,” she said.
One of the five major supermodels of the early 1990s, Campbell has featured on the covers of more than 500 magazines. However, she wrote in this month’s British Vogue she only recently began feeling more at ease in her own skin.
“Just because I’m a model doesn’t mean that I felt comfortable,” she said.
“If I would put on something that was figure hugging and I had to go outside and get a taxi in New York City, I’d always tie a cardigan around my waist because I felt a little self-conscious,” she said.
Campbell founded charitable organization Fashion For Relief in 2005, hosting catwalk shows to raise funds for causes that have included victims of Hurricane Katrina and Typhoon Haiyan.
She began her charity work with former South African president Nelson Mandela, who referred to her as “honorary granddaughter.”
The British Fashion Council on Monday said Campbell would receive the Fashion Icon Award at December’s Fashion Awards in recognition of her industry contribution and charity work.
Campbell said the award was “an honor and thrill.”
Asked about Britain’s impending departure from the EU and its impact on the country’s fashion industry, London-born Campbell said: “How’s Brexit going to affect the country on the whole is what I care about.
“I don’t think divide is good in any situation and there is a divide and when there’s divide there’s unrest, and unrest is not good,” she said, but added that she hoped there would be more opportunities in fashion.
“When people say global to me and I ask them if they mean are they in Africa and they say no, they’re not global to me... So if this is going to open up the territories that were not included ... then I’m for it in our fashion industry,” she said.
A ship that appears to be taking on the identity of a scrapped gas carrier exited the Strait of Hormuz on Friday, showing how strategies to get through the waterway are evolving as the Middle East war progresses. The vessel identifying as liquefied natural gas (LNG) carrier Jamal left the Strait on Friday morning, ship-tracking data show. However, the same tanker was also recorded as having beached at an Indian demolition yard in October last year, where it is being broken up, according to market participants and port agent’s reports. The ship claiming to be Jamal is likely a zombie vessel that
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU) yesterday faced a regional election battle in Rhineland-Palatinate, now held by the center-left Social Democratic Party (SPD). Merz’s CDU has enjoyed a narrow poll lead over the SPD — their coalition partners at the national level — who have ruled the mid-sized state for 35 years. Polling third is the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), which spells a greater threat to the two centrist parties in several state elections in September in the country’s ex-communist east. The picturesque state of Rhineland-Palatinate, bordering France, Belgium and Luxembourg and with a population of about 4 million,
LAW CONSTRAINTS: The US has been pressing allies to send warships to open the Strait, but Tokyo’s military actions are limited under its postwar pacifist constitution Japan could consider deploying its military for minesweeping in the Strait of Hormuz if a ceasefire is reached in the war on Iran, Japanese Minister of Foreign Affairs Toshimitsu Motegi said yesterday. “If there were to be a complete ceasefire, hypothetically speaking, then things like minesweeping could come up,” Motegi said. “This is purely hypothetical, but if a ceasefire were established and naval mines were creating an obstacle, then I think that would be something to consider.” Japan’s military actions are limited under its postwar pacifist constitution, but 2015 security legislation allows Tokyo to use its Self-Defense Forces overseas if an attack,
Ugandan wildlife authorities have reintroduced rhinos into a remote protected area where they were once poached into extinction, an event seen by conservationists as a milestone in efforts to support the recovery of a species threatened by poaching. On Tuesday, two southern white rhinos from a private ranch in the East African country were reintroduced into Kidepo Valley National Park in the country’s northeast. Two more rhinos in metallic crates arrived on Thursday. There have been no rhinos in the park since 1983, the result of poaching. However, a private ranch in central Uganda — the Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary — has been