โYou canโt just do it alone with just Black people,โ says Sean Combs (โPuffyโ? โDiddyโ? โLoveโ?) in the cover story for Vanity Fairโs September issue. As The Root reported on Tuesday, the music industry impresario was referring to โsaving the Black race,โ which is reportedly among his numerous aims at this stage of his decades-long career. But when it comes to creating a stunning celebrity family photo, the patriarchโs portrait with teenage daughters Chance, Jessie James and DโLila Star Combs proves Black people can do it all by themselves.
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For the regal vignette, Combs was reportedly inspired by the work of Atlanta-based husband-and-wife team Creative Soul Photography, whose bestselling 2020 book Glory: Magical Visions of Black Beautyย not only celebrated the beauty of Black children and culture, but earned photographers Regis and Kahran Bethencourt a spot among the 2021 honorees of The Glow Up 50. While many celebs mightโve asked photographer Kaito, stylist June Ambrose and the creative team to simply riff on the coupleโs style for Vanity Fair, according to a post from Creative Soulโs Instagram account, Diddy did the right thing, enlisting the couple and their glam squad, hairstylist and TGU50 honoree Shanna Anise and makeup artist Ashlie Doxey to achieve the desired look.
โToo often, celebs are โinspiredโ by creatives without bringing in the actual talent,โ read the post, which gave a behind-the-scenes look at the July shoot (also seen above). โ[Diddy] wanted his girls to have a look similar to the CreativeSoul vibe for his [Vanity Fair] shoot and invited our team out to Cali to assist with the girlsโ looks. [Shanna Anise] and [Ashlie Doxey] crushed the hair and makeup looks for these. Kudos to everyone that made the shoot happen.โ
See how easy that was? Itโs one of those rare moments where a creator gets to participate in (and profit from) the homage, and weโre here for itโas well as the esteemed credit of these self-built creativesโ work appearing in Vanity Fair. (Additional shouts are due to Editor-in-Chief Radhika Blank, who has been instrumental in increasing Black representation on both sides of the lens at the legacy imprint).
As for the Bethencourts, Vanity Fair isnโt the only milestone theyโre celebrating. On September 21, they will publish their first mass-produced calendar with Workman Publishing, titled โHeirs.โ Just a few weeks later, the coupleโs first childrenโs book, The Me I Choose to Be (Little, Brown Young Readers) will be released on October 12. Described as a โbeautiful picture book which is an uplifting ode to the power of potential,โ the text is penned by bestselling author of I Love My Hair, Natasha Tarpley.
See? We told you Black people could do it all by themselves.
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