Reprinted from the Seattle Times for class.
At home with 13-year-old Tavi Gevinson, one of the young bloggers turning the fashion scene inside out. Tavi’s Style Rookie blog (tavi-thenewgirlintown.blogspot.com) has caught the attention of fashion magazines, stores and designers.
By Megan Twohey
Chicago Tribune
CHICAGO — Tavi Gevinson sat in a west suburban cafe consuming cheese pizza, hot chocolate and a fruit roll-up — the type of meal you’d expect from a 13-year-old.
As she nibbled, a receptionist from her doctor’s office came over to say hello, while a waitress wondered aloud if she was related to another teenager in town.
“As you can see, my fame is extraordinary here,” Tavi said, her 4-foot-6 frame barely visible behind the table. “Seriously, no one around here has any idea who I am.”
No idea that since she began blogging about fashion from her suburban bedroom at age 11, Tavi has become an international sensation, viewed as one of the most popular — and controversial — figures in the world of high fashion.
No idea that when she’s not studying for a science test, having sleepovers with friends or attending summer camp, the 8th grader can be found in the front row at New York’s Fashion Week, adorning the cover of ultra-hip Pop magazine and helping to launch a new fashion line for Target.
The daughter of a high school English teacher, Tavi combined her razor-sharp writing skills, precocious attitude and Internet savvy into a high profile in the fashion community, using her youth and small size as bold exclamation points.
“She’s only 13, but Tavi Gevinson has the fashion world enraptured,” gushed Harper’s Bazaar in the introduction to a column Tavi penned for the January issue, making her the youngest writer ever published in the magazine.
Like a pint-sized suburban superhero, Tavi passes her days as a typical middle school student before transforming by night into a celebrated author and star of her blog, Style Rookie. She posts artistic photos of herself dressed in cutting-edge outfits and serves up sophisticated musings on the latest fashion trends, drawing nearly 30,000 viewers each day.
Related articles
- Fashionista Didn’t Mean To Say Tavi Gevinson Was Just “A Novelty” [In/fashion] (jezebel.com)
- Fashion Advice From A 13-Year-Old? (trueslant.com)
- Elle Editor Leads Backlash Against 13-Year-Old Fashion Blogger [In/fashion] (jezebel.com)
- Tavi Has Seen Into Karl Lagerfeld’s Soul [Fashion] (cityfile.com)
- Reporter Watches Dior Show Through Tavi’s Hat (PHOTO) (huffingtonpost.com)
- Tempest In A Trilby: Fashion Blogger Tavi Gevinson’s Hated Hat [Hate Couture] (jezebel.com)
- “I hope she sees her blog as the thing, rather than as a path to somewhere else.” (althouse.blogspot.com)
The following archival copy is only in the event the original article disappears. Please go back and read the full article from the original site. It is simply a matter of honorably allowing the advertisers to provide their services and pay for this kind of well written article. I will also add that the related articles and comments are the best part of the online experience and not reproduced here.
She’s a tween phenomenon that would have been impossible before the Internet, but her success is not just virtual. To the dismay of some members of fashion’s old guard, Tavi has recently leaped into the scene on which she comments, submitting to a photo shoot in London, hanging with elite fashion designers in Tokyo and hobnobbing with singer Gwen Stefani, actress Chloe Sevigny and other celebrity guests at an event at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles.
“There are two stories here,” said her mother, Berit Engen. “The 13-year-old who lives in our house, and the 13-year-old who is being taken very seriously in this world of fashion.”
Some in the industry suggest the young blogger could be more novelty than anything, but Harper’s, Target and others are betting on her.
Asked if she was worried about being used as a gimmick, Tavi said she would never be a part of anything that she does not admire. She has said no to 95 percent of interview requests. She’s declined reality show pitches, book deals and other opportunities.
<script language="JavaScript" type="text/javascript"> document.write('<a href="http://clk.atdmt.com/M0N/go/196880066/direct;wi.300;hi.250/01/" target="_blank"><img src="http://view.atdmt.com/M0N/view/196880066/direct;wi.300;hi.250/01/"/></a>'); </script><noscript><a href="http://clk.atdmt.com/M0N/go/196880066/direct;wi.300;hi.250/01/" target="_blank"><img border="0" src="http://view.atdmt.com/M0N/view/196880066/direct;wi.300;hi.250/01/" /></a></noscript>
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.