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Can’t Nobody Hold Us Down: Who Was the All-Black Team Behind Vanity Fair’s Iconic Diddy-Daughters Portrait?

The work of Atlanta-based photographers Creative Soul inspired the shot's regal looks, and the entire team was invited to consult on the image.

โ€œYou canโ€™t just do it alone with just Black people,โ€ says Sean Combs (โ€œPuffyโ€? โ€œDiddyโ€? โ€œLoveโ€?) in the cover story for Vanity Fairโ€™s September issue. As The Root reported on Tuesday, the music industry impresario was referring to โ€œsaving 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 patriarchโ€™s portrait with teenage daughters Chance, Jessie James and Dโ€™Lila Star Combs proves Black people can do it all by themselves.

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Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach
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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 mightโ€™ve asked photographer Kaito, stylist June Ambrose and the creative team to simply riff on the coupleโ€™s style for Vanity Fair, according to a post from Creative Soulโ€™s 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.

โ€œToo often, celebs are โ€˜inspiredโ€™ 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€œ[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? Itโ€™s one of those rare moments where a creator gets to participate in (and profit from) the homage, and weโ€™re here for itโ€”as 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 isnโ€™t the only milestone theyโ€™re celebrating. On September 21, they will publish their first mass-produced calendar with Workman Publishing, titled โ€œHeirs.โ€ Just a few weeks later, the coupleโ€™s first childrenโ€™s book, The Me I Choose to Be (Little, Brown Young Readers) will be released on October 12. Described as a โ€œbeautiful 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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