What was the intention behind the creative direction of the campaign?
We had a lot of conversations about having people feel really in their skin and having somewhat of a self-portrait of how they see themselves. Particularly, as we were looking at styling, [we wanted] each person to feel like themselves and not like we're putting a style on them, so to speak. How do they want to look? How do they want to feel beautiful? How do they want to own the camera and the space, as opposed [to feeling like] the campaign is trying to shape you. This is really about letting them shine through and [capturing] how they like to feel.
Was there ever a pivotal moment in your life in which you followed your gut, were true to yourself and truly did things your way—even if it meant breaking the “rules”?
When I was looking to get into fashion, it was a very different time. There was no internet, no Instagram, no Project Runway. And the only school that had any avenue towards fashion was Parsons. I was introduced to Parsons by my drawing teacher who gave me a book called Antonio's Girls and, back then, I had never seen anything like it. Antonio Lopez was an incredible illustrator. But what was amazing to me was that he drew women who didn't look like the women that I'd seen. I lived in California and the only ideas of beauty I had seen were the Baywatch girls: blonde hair, blue eyes, big boobs, tan... That was what I thought beauty was. Here, Antonio Lopez was highlighting women like Grace Jones and Tina Chao and Jerry Hall and Marisa Berenson.
They were all completely different. None of them fit into that mold of what I thought beauty was. And that really ignited something for me, wanting to be a part of a world that just felt so much more inclusive. Not that it necessarily was, but at least I believed that and I wanted to be a part of that.