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Preview of 2010 Pirelli calendar photographed by Terry Richardson published in July/2009 issue of Italian Vanity Fair [ via bwgreyscale ].
Models: (left to right) Eniko Mihalik, Rosie Huntington-Whiteley, Catherine McNeil, Abbey Lee Kershaw, Daisy Lowe, Gracie Carvalho, Marloes Horst, Lily Cole, Ana Beatriz Barros, Miranda Kerr, and Georgina Stojilkovic. Oh, and Terry himself, of course :)

The goal this year was to use "no makeup, no reflectors — only the flash of the camera — no branded clothes or jewelry, no girls altered surgically," said Andrea Imperiali, manager of Pirelli on the set. Terry produced thousands of images from the shoot with the girls holding sloths, fruit, roosters, and holding hands while running through waves in little else than a bikini bottom, fifty images will make the final cut when the calendar is debuted Nov. 19 in London [ via fashionologie ].

MQ pictures under the cut )

Also, behind the scenes video:
[Error: unknown template video]

UPD: added few more pics, fixed dead video link. Knowing Pirelli and knowing YouTube, any given upload of that clip won't last too long.
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Cindy Crawford, Christy Turlington, Claudia Schiffer, Linda Evangelista and Stephanie Seymour in August/2008 issue of Vanity Fair, A League of Their Own photographed by Mario Testino [ via bwgreyscale ].



Almost a reunion of famous 1989 photograph by Herb Ritts Stephanie, Cindy, Christy, Tatjana, Naomi:

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Behind the scenes from shooting of 2009 Pirelli Calendar in n.23 July/2008 issue of Italian Vanity Fair. Models include: Daria Werbowy, Mariacarla Boscono, Lara Stone, Malgosia Bela, Rianne ten Haken, Isabeli Fontana, Emanuela De Paula.

more under the cut )

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Sasha Pivovarova in May/2007 issue of German Vanity Fair, photographed by Michael Thompson [ via bwgreyscale ].
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Vanity Fair April/2005, photographed by Patrick Demarchelier

"From Russia with Sand, Surf, and Microbikinis! | Slavs of Fashion: The New Beauties"

Models: Natalia Vodianova, Carmen Kass, Karolina Kurkova, Eugenia Volodina, Hana Soukupova, Marija Vujovic, Natasha Poly, Valentina Zelyaeva, Inguna Butane.

[ photoshoot pictures ]
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An editorial, photographed by Patrick Demarchelier on Harbour Island in the Bahamas, with a lenghty double title "From Russia with Sand, Surf, and Microbikinis!" and "Slavs of Fashion: The New Beauties" was published in April/2005 issue of Vanity Fair. Featured models are: Natalia Vodianova, Carmen Kass, Karolina Kurkova, Eugenia Volodina, Hana Soukupova, Marija Vujovic, Natasha Poly, Valentina Zelyaeva, Inguna Butane. Gawker bashed this ed on the grounds that Eastern European models aren't representing any new trend and that the whole thing rather belongs to Maxim than to Vanity Fair. IMHO this is much better than pretty much anything published in Maxim, but I do have a bone to pick with Evgenia Peretz, who wrote the text for this ed. Out of the total of 9 models only 4 (Vodianova, Volodina, Poly & Zelyaeva) are from Russia and only 6 (+ Kass & Butane) from the former Soviet Union, so there is a little problem with "From Russia..." title. The other version of the title - "Slavs of Fashion" - concentrates on the ethnicity, rather than the country of origin, and does a better job, but still isn't quite correct - Kass is Estonian, Butane is Latvian, and neither Estonian, nor Latvian belongs to Slavic subfamily of Indo-European family (Latvian -> Baltic -> Indo-European; Estonian -> Finno-Ugric -> Uralic). And I'm not even going to start about as stupid as it gets "Got Vodka?" slogan...

Anyway, here are the pics Under the Cut )

Vanity Fair website also a has a video, with yet another version of the title "Behind the Iron Catwalk: The New Supermodels", apparently shooting for a witty parallel with Churchill's Fulton speech.

And finally a note about the spelling of Russian lastnames. Luckily for Водянова and Володина, their last names adopted single versions of transliteration, which they are now known by - Vodianova and Volodina respectively. Poor Зеляева is being probably equally often credited as either Zelyaeva or Zeliaeva and every once in a while as Zelaeva. This probably explains why Полевщикова decided to reduce the cumberosme latinisation of her lastname - Polevshchikova - to simple Poly.

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