Julia Fox and Law Roach team up for a sustainable fashion competition show
Time:2024-05-29 09:13:15 Source:worldViews(143)
For Julia Fox, life is a catwalk. The looks she puts together — cutting off the belt loops of her jeans or creating a top made from tartan ties sewed together — are almost always guaranteed to turn heads and be photographed.
Alongside Law Roach, Fox is a host and judge of the new E! fashion competition show “OMG Fashun,” premiering Monday. Roach stepped back from styling celebrity clients last year but still works with select people like Zendaya, who is co-hosting Monday’s Met Gala and recently turned heads with her looks for both the “Challengers” and “Dune: Part Two” press tours.
In each episode, contestants — or “disrupters” as they’re called — are challenged to reuse materials and upcycle fashion for unique looks meant to impress Roach, Fox and a guest judge. The winner walks away with $10,000 and Fox models their design.
Executives at Scout Productions, which produces “OMG Fashun,” say the show works because it fits with both hosts’ fashion philosophies. Roach likes to buy archival pieces from designers to give clothing a second life. Fox is against environmentally unfriendly fast fashion, instead stressing working with what you have. That extends to production meetings.
Previous:7 injured after natural gas explosion in Youngstown, Ohio
Next:New Jersey and wind farm developer Orsted settle claims for $125M over scrapped offshore projects
You may also like
- Sharks sign prized prospect Will Smith to a 3
- China's new high
- 'The Met Police are making no
- At playoff time, NHL teams march to the beat of their goaltenders and count on them to save the day
- Why I love my CSA (it's more than the weekly box of fresh produce)
- South Africa man convicted in deaths of 2 Alaska Native women faces revocation of U.S. citizenship
- Worker electrocuted while doing maintenance on utility pole in upstate New York
- 'Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare' review: Guy Ritchie amps up WWII heist
- Analysis: Korda is head and shoulders over her peers. She hopes winning is enough to help golf grow