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Yahoo Style

Why Celebrities Matter to Fashion (and Vice Versa)

Sam LaneEditorial Assistant
Updated
1991: Models Become A-Listers

1991: Models Become A-Listers

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Gianni Versace capitalized on the magnificent power of the supermodel during the early 90s by casting the big four—Christy Turlington, Naomi Campbell, Linda Evangelista, and Cindy Crawford— to walk the runway and appear in his ad campaigns. These women were considered to be a new power elite, not only because they were beautiful and brought real personality to the runway, but also because they were the ultimate dream of self-made success. They received tremendous promotions from average earnings of $8 per hour to $1.8 million contracts with fashion’s biggest labels and appeared in popular music videos like George Michael’s “Freedom 90,” which was yet another springboard to their fame, exalting their status from supermodels to super women.

Fashion knows that celebrity sells, perhaps even more than sex. Even the editor-in-chief of the world’s most sophisticated fashion magazine, Anna Wintour, cashed in on the double whammy, putting Kim Kardashian, who’s an A-list celebrity with a sex tape, on the cover of Vogue. To no one’s surprise, Mrs. Kardashian West has already made an impression on Paris Fashion Week over the past couple of days: she revealed her new platinum blonde hair and right nipple on the same day. But KK is not the only megastar flocking to PFW this season. So far, we’ve spotted Lorde, Jared Leto, and 50 Shades of Grey star Dakota Johnson (Jaime Dornan was MIA—womp, womp) in the front row.

It may seem like these celebrities are only supporting their designer friends when they fly first class to Paris for a 15-minute show, but there’s a lot more to the relationship between a celebrity and a brand. For one thing, most are stars often paid to sit front row, or they have million dollar contracts. For another, they’re actually fueling the business by bringing unprecedented attention to a runway show, and thus the brand.

This relationship between fashion and celebrity has always been reciprocal. Ever since Jackie Onassis repeatedly wore Oscar de la Renta to glitzy events (and was always the best dressed), and Audrey Hepburn became friends Hubert de Givenchy, turning the label into the most desired fashion house of the 1950s to today, both sides have learned how to promote one another.

But it was during the early 90s that some of the most major stars infiltrated the fashion industry. They populated the catwalks of Paris (sometimes even modeling the clothes), they appeared in fashion magazines and ads, and some even collaborated with designers or became designers themselves.

Here, we look at a timeline of the best, unexpected, and downright worst celebrity moments in fashion.

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