
Source: The Fashion Spot
Photography: Chad Pitman
Today, I take my very last mid-term. Amen. And while I'm slowing ridding myself of the pre-test stress, enjoy Marilyn's Arlenis Sosa Peña on the new cover of TIME Style & Design Magazine. I'll be back on Monday. Enjoy your weekend!

While you wait for what seems like an eternity for Katie Grand's highly-anticipated tome to land stateside, check out the diary the power stylist created for the London Times.
On the Prada boutique she is styling:
"Where was I? Prada, designing its Bond Street store. In at 10am, moving mannequins, changing crocodile gloves to knitted gloves and white beaded sandals to men’s lace-ups. My friend, the photographer David Sims, has made a film of skateboarding mannequins to be shown on screens in the store."
On the pressure to be thin:
"I go to the gym most days; running is my favourite thing. I feel pressure to stay slim - I think everyone does. I’ve never been obsessed with youth or thinness; I simply respond to people I like. Like Beth Ditto, who’s on the cover of my new magazine, Love: she’s not your stereotypical fashion mag girl."
>>Continue Reading: "On turning away models who may be unhealthy"
This past weekend, New York Times did a piece about the current state of women-oriented magazines.
Because of the economic crisis that we're in right now, the piece basically goes on to say that magazine staffs are becoming much smaller, advertisers are becoming more bully-ish, and vacations, well, they are slowly but surely disappearing.
The summer work days for editors are becoming longer and more important, for ad sales have been down for all women's mags over the past few months and the pressure to do well with the big fall issues is greater than ever.
This means all of these magazine's interns are really getting the chance to cut their teeth in the fashion industry right now. In fact, Interview, who plans to usher in all of its new changes with its September issue, has lots of its interns contributing to the process of putting the fall issue together.
So this begs the question: When will magazines make the move to the internet? The one reason why fashion blogs have become popular so popular is because of their constant updating. Something your favorite fashion mag can't provide with its monthly issues.
No, I don't plan on canceling any of my subscription in the near future. But how realistic is it for magazines not to try to make their internet presence as viable as their paper editions. Especially, with the popularity of blogs not appearing to be slowing down anytime soon. It could only be for their benefit.
Maybe the day when internet editors reign supreme and have clout really isn't too far away in fashion's current state.