Her signature beauty mark was once considered a flaw. Agents told her to remove it; instead, she made it her brand, leading to a $7 million Pepsi contract.
She changed her hair color (from blonde to brunette to red) for every major fashion season, forcing designers to adapt to her .
Linda Evangelista famously quipped, "We don't wake up for less than $10,000 a day." That quote became the era's manifesto. Supermodels 7 17
Despite being in their 40s and 50s, Cindy, Naomi, Christy, and Linda all returned for major campaigns (like Marc Jacobs and Balmain), proving their faces are timeless.
Naomi and Christy were best friends, but Naomi famously threw a phone at her assistant—a moment that turned into a tabloid legend. The tension between Naomi and Linda was also fierce. Her signature beauty mark was once considered a flaw
Naomi Campbell broke countless racial barriers, but she famously had to walk alone for years as the only Black woman in top-tier campaigns.
In a tragic modern twist, Linda Evangelista sued a cosmetic company in 2021 after a fat-freezing procedure left her "permanently deformed." She won a settlement, but it highlighted the physical price of beauty. Conclusion The 7 supermodels of the 17-year peak (roughly 1989–2006) were not just clotheshorses. They were the first celebrities to prove that a model could have a name, a brand, and a power base independent of the designer. To this day, the "7/17" generation remains the standard by which all modern models are judged. Linda Evangelista famously quipped, "We don't wake up
The industry shifted toward "waifs" (Kate Moss) and actresses. Designers began using celebrities on runways, sidelining the expensive supermodels.
Versace was the designer who paid all seven to walk the same runway in 1991. He treated them like rock stars, not hangers.
Vogue UK’s January 1992 cover (by Peter Lindbergh) featured Cindy, Naomi, Christy, Linda, and Tatjana. It is considered the "Holy Grail" of model collectives.
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