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Thread started 02/21/11 11:58am

Harlepolis

Look @ This Upcoming Beyonce Photo-Shoot And Tell Me What U Think...

From L'Official

Mrs Jay Z agreed to pose for an incredible fashion shoot, with the theme of African Queen, paying a tribute to the legendary Fela Kuti. Far from the glamorous Sasha Fierce, the beauty posed for the magazine with amazing fashion designers clothes, but also in a dress created by her mother. It is a return to her African roots, as you can see on the picture, on which her face was voluntarily darkened”.

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Reply #1 posted 02/21/11 12:10pm

2elijah

Harlepolis said:

From L'Official

Mrs Jay Z agreed to pose for an incredible fashion shoot, with the theme of African Queen, paying a tribute to the legendary Fela Kuti. Far from the glamorous Sasha Fierce, the beauty posed for the magazine with amazing fashion designers clothes, but also in a dress created by her mother. It is a return to her African roots, as you can see on the picture, on which her face was voluntarily darkened”.

I'm surprised. Nice images. I don't see the need for her to darken her skin to do that though.

[Edited 2/21/11 12:13pm]

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Reply #2 posted 02/21/11 2:07pm

HatrinaHaterwi
tz

avatar

African roots? eek But she's CREOLE!!!! faint

evillol

.

[Edited 2/21/11 14:08pm]

I knew from the start that I loved you with all my heart.
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Reply #3 posted 02/21/11 2:11pm

HatrinaHaterwi
tz

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Seriously though, lovely pics but in that one where her skin was darkened...it looks like they missed a spot. What's up with that?

I knew from the start that I loved you with all my heart.
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Reply #4 posted 02/21/11 2:48pm

TotalAlisa

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i just can't stand her anymore..... those pics look strange

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Reply #5 posted 02/21/11 2:50pm

SoulAlive

HatrinaHaterwitz said:

African roots? eek But she's CREOLE!!!! faint

evillol

This is Beyonce we're talking about.She has to cover all the bases lol

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Reply #6 posted 02/21/11 2:54pm

armpit

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Beyonce's black though.

Why would they need to do a photoshoot with her in it about Black Queens and then make her darker?

Black people come in every hue.

"I don't think you'd do well in captivity." - random person's comment to me the other day
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Reply #7 posted 02/21/11 2:57pm

therevolutionw
illnotbe

popcorn

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Reply #8 posted 02/21/11 2:58pm

armpit

avatar

therevolutionwillnotbe said:

popcorn

Yeah, this is probably gonna be one of those threads lol .

"I don't think you'd do well in captivity." - random person's comment to me the other day
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Reply #9 posted 02/21/11 3:07pm

sosgemini

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Aww, she's been watching America's Next Top Model. She worked out her smize and everything.

Space for sale...
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Reply #10 posted 02/21/11 3:09pm

lastdecember

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Im seeing major confusion, first she does appearances and "lightens" up everything then she does a shoot and darkens everything, how about be your own self? just a thought maybe worth looking into.


"We went where our music was appreciated, and that was everywhere but the USA, we knew we had fans, but there is only so much of the world you can play at once" Magne F
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Reply #11 posted 02/21/11 8:45pm

NaughtyKitty

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yeahthat

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Reply #12 posted 02/22/11 12:48am

Ottensen

HatrinaHaterwitz said:

African roots? eek But she's CREOLE!!!! faint

evillol

.

[Edited 2/21/11 14:08pm]

I thought she said her mother is Creole. Creoles recognize their African roots as part of their racial make-up, though. At least in Louisiana they do confuse

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Reply #13 posted 02/22/11 4:02am

HatrinaHaterwi
tz

avatar

Ottensen said:

HatrinaHaterwitz said:

African roots? eek But she's CREOLE!!!! faint

evillol

.

[Edited 2/21/11 14:08pm]

I thought she said her mother is Creole. Creoles recognize their African roots as part of their racial make-up, though. At least in Louisiana they do confuse

LOL! I know that. This was just a tip-of-my-hat/wag-of-my-finger to that Sheila E ain't no sista thread that went down in flames in PM&M. lol

.

[Edited 2/22/11 4:03am]

I knew from the start that I loved you with all my heart.
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Reply #14 posted 02/22/11 5:13am

missfee

avatar

HatrinaHaterwitz said:

Ottensen said:

I thought she said her mother is Creole. Creoles recognize their African roots as part of their racial make-up, though. At least in Louisiana they do confuse

LOL! I know that. This was just a tip-of-my-hat/wag-of-my-finger to that Sheila E ain't no sista thread that went down in flames in PM&M. lol

.

[Edited 2/22/11 4:03am]

omfg 'Going over to check out the Shiela E. thread' lol

I will forever love and miss you...my sweet Prince.
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Reply #15 posted 02/22/11 5:15am

SoulAlive

missfee said:

HatrinaHaterwitz said:

LOL! I know that. This was just a tip-of-my-hat/wag-of-my-finger to that Sheila E ain't no sista thread that went down in flames in PM&M. lol

.

omfg 'Going over to check out the Shiela E. thread' lol

that thread was a disaster lol I think it got locked very quickly.

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Reply #16 posted 02/22/11 6:01am

Ottensen

Harlepolis said:

From L'Official

Mrs Jay Z agreed to pose for an incredible fashion shoot, with the theme of African Queen, paying a tribute to the legendary Fela Kuti. Far from the glamorous Sasha Fierce, the beauty posed for the magazine with amazing fashion designers clothes, but also in a dress created by her mother. It is a return to her African roots, as you can see on the picture, on which her face was voluntarily darkened”.

What do I think?

I think that Beyonce is a very pretty girl, but I also think that I am so fatigued of seeing beyonce trying to push herself onto us as a fashion phenomenon, because she is not. While she is arguably a pop culture darling she is not a fashion icon. There is a marked difference, the first of which is having a discernable, self-possessed sense of style that sets, rather than follows trends. No matter how may dresses she swirls around in, no many how many magazine covers, no matter how many pounds of make-up you slap on that face, Beyonce, of bow legs and pigeon toes is not nor ever will be a fashion industry legend. What she is attempting to achieve is simply best left to those who have done it best, the very uttering of their names signifying inspiration and revolution in the world of fashion. I'm sorry, but when I think of the great architects of style, Mme. Vionnet, Balenciaga, Chanel, Yves St. Laurent, Givenchy, Lauren, this is not the visage I see:

Jay-Z Beyonce

I would rather remember and pay homage to these women, the iconclasts who are the very fabric of fashion :


The Originator, Naomi Sims

Naomi Sims 60's

Beverly Johnson

Beverly Johnson for revlon

Pat Cleveland

Pat Cleveland

Mounia, inspiration to Givenchy and St, Laurent, THE couture fashion muse of France

Supermodel MOUNIA KNIGHT OF THE ORDER OF MERIT

Grace Jones

photoshoot grace jones

Lana Ogilvie

[Lanaogilvie.jpg]

Roshumba

Roshumba Williams |


Beverly Peele

beverly07

Cynthia Bailey

Cynthia Bailey and daughter Noelle in Essence magazine

Claudia Mason

Naomi

Vivienne-westwood

Liya Kebede

Waris Dirie

Waris Dirie

Atong

Atong-jork-by-nicholas-routzen

and The MOTHERLOAD, IMAN:


and the scores of others that go nameless to the general public, yet to the fashion industry are true stars, women with clearly defined essence, sense of style, who inspire creation. For me I'll take that rather than some blank canvas who goes with what is of the moment simply because they want another popular choice award to hang on their wall. Again, I think Knowles is an absolutely lovely girl, a great singer, but looking at her does not make me want to live, breathe, and eat fashion or originality. She makes me want to try a lace front, learn a good line dance, and practice hitting a D5 on my vocal scale, but not much else. I'm much rather interested in her sister's strong willed attitude toward dressing, or her mother's forays into Walmart sportswear and ladies dresses.


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Reply #17 posted 02/22/11 6:04am

Ottensen

missfee said:

HatrinaHaterwitz said:

LOL! I know that. This was just a tip-of-my-hat/wag-of-my-finger to that Sheila E ain't no sista thread that went down in flames in PM&M. lol

.

[Edited 2/22/11 4:03am]

omfg 'Going over to check out the Shiela E. thread' lol

Oh my LAWD. I'll see y'all over there!!! lol lol lol

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Reply #18 posted 02/22/11 6:26am

Harlepolis

Ottensen said:

missfee said:

omfg 'Going over to check out the Shiela E. thread' lol

Oh my LAWD. I'll see y'all over there!!! lol lol lol

What thread? lurking The ones I found are not locked geek

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Reply #19 posted 02/22/11 6:53am

2elijah

Ottensen said:

HatrinaHaterwitz said:

African roots? eek But she's CREOLE!!!! faint

evillol

.

[Edited 2/21/11 14:08pm]

I thought she said her mother is Creole. Creoles recognize their African roots as part of their racial make-up, though. At least in Louisiana they do confuse--

I heard her mother is a "Creole of color" of mixed ancestry (African/European heritage), like many in Louisiana.

[Edited 2/22/11 7:17am]

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Reply #20 posted 02/22/11 7:04am

2elijah

Harlepolis said:

Ottensen said:

Oh my LAWD. I'll see y'all over there!!! lol lol lol

What thread? lurking The ones I found are not locked geek

http://prince.org/msg/7/353000

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Reply #21 posted 02/22/11 7:08am

JoeTyler

slighty puzzling and frightening pics

no need to darken her skin...she's probably creole...

tinkerbell
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Reply #22 posted 02/22/11 7:15am

2elijah

JoeTyler said:

slighty puzzling and frightening pics

no need to darken her skin...she's probably creole...

I don't see anything frightening about the pics, but Beyonce's mother is supposedly a "Creole of Color" - of African/European heritage. Beyonce's father is African-American. With that combination, in America, that's Black. That magazine could have found many African models to do that photo shoot.

[Edited 2/22/11 7:16am]

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Reply #23 posted 02/22/11 7:19am

2elijah

Ottensen said:

Harlepolis said:

From L'Official

What do I think?

I think that Beyonce is a very pretty girl, but I also think that I am so fatigued of seeing beyonce trying to push herself onto us as a fashion phenomenon, because she is not. While she is arguably a pop culture darling she is not a fashion icon. There is a marked difference, the first of which is having a discernable, self-possessed sense of style that sets, rather than follows trends. No matter how may dresses she swirls around in, no many how many magazine covers, no matter how many pounds of make-up you slap on that face, Beyonce, of bow legs and pigeon toes is not nor ever will be a fashion industry legend. What she is attempting to achieve is simply best left to those who have done it best, the very uttering of their names signifying inspiration and revolution in the world of fashion. I'm sorry, but when I think of the great architects of style, Mme. Vionnet, Balenciaga, Chanel, Yves St. Laurent, Givenchy, Lauren, this is not the visage I see:

Jay-Z Beyonce

I would rather remember and pay homage to these women, the iconclasts who are the very fabric of fashion :


The Originator, Naomi Sims

Naomi Sims 60's

Beverly Johnson

Beverly Johnson for revlon

Pat Cleveland

Pat Cleveland

Mounia, inspiration to Givenchy and St, Laurent, THE couture fashion muse of France

Supermodel MOUNIA KNIGHT OF THE ORDER OF MERIT

Grace Jones

photoshoot grace jones

Lana Ogilvie

[Lanaogilvie.jpg]

Roshumba

Roshumba Williams |


Beverly Peele

beverly07

Cynthia Bailey

Cynthia Bailey and daughter Noelle in Essence magazine

Claudia Mason

Naomi

Vivienne-westwood

Liya Kebede

Waris Dirie

Waris Dirie

Atong

Atong-jork-by-nicholas-routzen

and The MOTHERLOAD, IMAN:


and the scores of others that go nameless to the general public, yet to the fashion industry are true stars, women with clearly defined essence, sense of style, who inspire creation. For me I'll take that rather than some blank canvas who goes with what is of the moment simply because they want another popular choice award to hang on their wall. Again, I think Knowles is an absolutely lovely girl, a great singer, but looking at her does not make me want to live, breathe, and eat fashion or originality. She makes me want to try a lace front, learn a good line dance, and practice hitting a D5 on my vocal scale, but not much else. I'm much rather interested in her sister's strong willed attitude toward dressing, or her mother's forays into Walmart sportswear and ladies dresses.


In that pic of Beyonce, she's starting to look like Dolly Parton with that big blond, hairdo.

Gorgeous pics! I love Iman, such a strong, confident woman and a philanthropist. I saw her on the BET Honors yesterday, and she is still gorgeous as ever.

[Edited 2/22/11 9:05am]

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Reply #24 posted 02/22/11 7:21am

Lammastide

avatar

armpit said:

Beyonce's black though.

Why would they need to do a photoshoot with her in it about Black Queens and then make her darker?

Black people come in every hue.

I agree entirely. No need to make her faux black when she already is black.

Ὅσον ζῇς φαίνου
μηδὲν ὅλως σὺ λυποῦ
πρὸς ὀλίγον ἐστὶ τὸ ζῆν
τὸ τέλος ὁ χρόνος ἀπαιτεῖ.”
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Reply #25 posted 02/22/11 7:25am

2elijah

Lammastide said:

armpit said:

Beyonce's black though.

Why would they need to do a photoshoot with her in it about Black Queens and then make her darker?

Black people come in every hue.

I agree entirely. No need to make her faux black when she already is black.

I think it would have been nice if they just left her complexion alone;this way she could have just shown the many shades of women of color that exists among Black American and African women. That's what the magazine could have taken the opportunity to do. They should have gathered all the known African and Black American models, with their various complexions, and dressed them up like they did Beyonce. Also the fact that it was in honor of musician/activist, Fela Kuti, and the many wives he had. They could have picked a great selection of Black American/African women to model for that photo shoot.

[Edited 2/22/11 7:44am]

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Reply #26 posted 02/22/11 9:17am

Ottensen

2elijah said:

Lammastide said:

I agree entirely. No need to make her faux black when she already is black.

I think it would have been nice if they just left her complexion alone;this way she could have just shown the many shades of women of color that exists among Black American and African women. That's what the magazine could have taken the opportunity to do. They should have gathered all the known African and Black American models, with their various complexions, and dressed them up like they did Beyonce. Also the fact that it was in honor of musician/activist, Fela Kuti, and the many wives he had. They could have picked a great selection of Black American/African women to model for that photo shoot.

[Edited 2/22/11 7:44am]

Fantastic idea, but you know Beyowulf is not trying share editorial pages with anyone, and especially on a project tied to publicity for her husband's musical lol

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Reply #27 posted 02/22/11 9:36am

HotGritz

avatar

armpit said:

Beyonce's black though.

Why would they need to do a photoshoot with her in it about Black Queens and then make her darker?

Black people come in every hue.

Non-black people either tend to forget that major fact or choose to ignore it altogether. I think, no I suspect, that in some fashion and entertainment circles Beyonce is either too black or not black enough. Consider this pic and compare to her L'Oreal commercials in which she appears with lighter skin and blonde hair. The girl can't win. She has to be all things to all people. One of these days we will see a fashion shoot of Bey with slanted eyes and a Geisha wig.

I'M NOT SAYING YOU'RE UGLY. YOU JUST HAVE BAD LUCK WHEN IT COMES TO MIRRORS AND SUNLIGHT!
RIP Dick Clark, Whitney Houston, Don Cornelius, Heavy D, and Donna Summer. rose
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Reply #28 posted 02/22/11 9:40am

2elijah

Ottensen said:

2elijah said:

I think it would have been nice if they just left her complexion alone;this way she could have just shown the many shades of women of color that exists among Black American and African women. That's what the magazine could have taken the opportunity to do. They should have gathered all the known African and Black American models, with their various complexions, and dressed them up like they did Beyonce. Also the fact that it was in honor of musician/activist, Fela Kuti, and the many wives he had. They could have picked a great selection of Black American/African women to model for that photo shoot.

[Edited 2/22/11 7:44am]

Fantastic idea, but you know Beyowulf is not trying share editorial pages with anyone, and especially on a project tied to publicity for her husband's musical lol

Oh yeah, I forgot he was one of the producers (?) of that play, along with the Will Smith's. I saw Will, Jada and the kids at "Fela on Broadway", when I went to see it a second time; when Patti had a part in it. They waved to the crowd. Beyo, tries too hard and seems desperate to be the center of attention, yet I have to question the image she promotes on a daily basis. It's almost like she's trying to be the "blond ambition" since Gaga's been getting all the attention.lol

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Reply #29 posted 02/22/11 9:45am

NaughtyKitty

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Beyonce Blackface L’Officiel Magazine Pictures

Beyonce Blackface LOfficiel Magazine Pictures

Beyonce is Black, okay? At the very least, broadly, racially speaking. That said and agreed upon, even if you decide it’s more fun licking the fluff off the long lost Twizzler in your pocket (mmm, pocket fluff) than picking apart her exact ethnic/racial background, you’re still left with the slightly perplexing picture above. A picture that seems to suggest we need reminding of what Beyonce looks like in the botched ‘before’ pictures where L’Oreal gets a little too wild in MS Paint with its image contrast. Beyonce, looking beautiful I might add, poses and looks appropriately regal and elegant in a photo shoot in which she wearsblackface make-up for the L’Officiel Paris 90th anniversary March 2011 cover. She looks normal on what scans like a Harper’s Bazaar cover from 2007, but inside she’s dressed-up and made-up in homage to Nigerian musician Fela Kuti.

http://amygrindhouse.com/...kface.html

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