Viewpoints of a Model’s Success

Is your personal success as a model based on just having cool pictures of yourself to show others? Or is that success based solely on how much money you’re making? Well, how about other people in your career and life? How they may view your success can effect you, too. These are some suggestions of how to relate (or empathize) to some of the people that have different roles in your success.

#1 The Modeling Agency’s Viewpoint of your success as a model:

Think like an agent. Are clients going to book you? If you are signed with almost any agency, the bottom line will be how much money you are bringing into their business (or may potentially bring in). Remember this as your first and most important business lesson in your career as a model. Modeling agencies are your pipeline to how you are marketed(promoted) as a model, and they make their money (income) from “percentages” from 1.) the model’s commission and 2.) from the client’s fee.

The more money that you make as a model in their agency is another dollar in their pocket. So, there’s more involved in the bottom line of how your agent looks at your “potential” as a model. Will clients hire you? They are looking at how much “income” potential you can bring to their business. They must run their business efficiently, and you must do the same in the planning of your career, too. The agency’s role in your representation is that of a glorified “employment agency” that is a go-between for the client and model. The modeling agency works to provide resources to market all of their models, so it’s in their best interest to keep the right variety of models that are in demand.

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Fancy Dress for Special Occasions

For some occasions when you are required to dress up, there are various kinds of dresses that you can choose. In order to make you look outstanding choosing the best fancy dress that can draw people’s attention to you, you will need to have concept to dress in such way. There are many great dresses ideas that you can shop online easily. This is the easiest and also most fun way to get the kind of dress that you are looking for. You will be able to choose many different categories of fancy dresses that will accentuate your look in the party.
Halloween is no longer required you to dress in scary outfit. It depends on your own idea to dress whatever kind of figure that you want. Most college girls are likely to choose adult fancy dress costumes which are sexy and also fashionable. Indeed, there are various choices of fancy dresses for adult women that you can choose. The themes are varied but the message of the fancy dresses for women is the same: to look sexy. There are sailor dresses, nurse, cop, Indian, airline, animal, army, decade, Easter, Hawaiian, medieval, and many other themes that you can choose easily. There are many references that you can get about these themes easily online.
Halloween fancy dress is available for men and women in various classifications of ages. You will be able to find great, cute, and unique fancy dresses that you can use for Halloween when you are looking for them online. There are many online costume shops that you can find online to help you with the best dress that will make you look uniquely attractive. So, Halloween is no longer the time when you need to look ugly and ridiculous any more. You can find ample choices of fancy dresses that will make you look great and attractive.

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High Fashion Modeling Requirements As an Editorial Model – More Factors Than Just Tall and Skinny

Educating yourself to recognizing what editorial print modeling realistically “looks” like in a high fashion magazine is the first step to understanding the variations of the different types of editorial modeling and how it is different from the other more common types of “commercial” print modeling work. Editorial work in a magazine is a huge “jump-start” for a fashion model’s career. It is the experience many strive for.

“Editorial” print modeling refers to “magazine experience” for the model where a “story” is being told without words, but rather by photographic pictures (or groups of pictures) of the model in a high fashion magazine. This type of print modeling carries a very “prestigious” landmark on a model’s career. Its’ work includes the current fashion and beauty trends of society by showcasing designers, make-up, hairstyles, skin care, etc. as told and expressed via a pictorial story. Editorial modeling can even tell a story about all of the different aspects of people’s lifestyles. If you pick up any high-end fashion magazine you can find numerous examples of editorial print work.

Some editorials in magazines are considered so prestigious because they set the standards and trends for the current and “near future” of the market that the pictorial story is being told about. Refer back to those magazines that are from months, years, or even decades ago. Somehow, the editorial pictures you may find from that period of time have been a part of the history of fashion, beauty, or lifestyle as represented by that magazine’s staff.

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A Modeling Career – Some Considerations When Seeking Representation With a Modeling Agency

The center of a modeling career focuses on having representation by a modeling agency. There are other ways for unrepresented models to find work, but the role of a modeling agency should be understood by the model to compliment their career. The easiest comparison of a modeling agency is to the role of a specialized employment agency. Their specialty is finding jobs for models (a.k.a. talent) and finding models for jobs (a.k.a. clients). This may sound basically easy, but it’s in your best professional interest (as a model or parent) to learn the role that a modeling agency plays in this industry & how it may or may not work for your situation. Don’t forget about looking at the “Big Picture” of how it affects all of the agency’s models, employees, and their clients.

There are literally hundreds of reputable modeling agencies in the United States. In most states these agencies are governed by laws of their state and must be licensed as a private employment agency. Even their employees working in their agency may be required to be licensed, too. This is best for your overall personal and business protection. You should find out your state’s requirements because they certainly vary from state to state. There are standards that the agency must submit to in these cases such as being bonded, business background and financial checks, and copies of forms and contracts that will be utilized by the agency. This manner of screening also assists in weeding out some of the people involved in scams and poor moral business practices that just keep changing business names to stay ahead of their shady pasts.

Another requirement for an agency needing a license is if it is in the business of working with unions like SAG (Screen Actor’s Guild) and AFTRA (American Federation of Radio and Television Artists). These are the industry standards for models and actors, and an agency will be franchised as such usually quite clearly. There are other associations such as Better Business Bureau (BBB), that can be a resource for seeing if there have been a lot of complaints and unsettled disputes with an agency. These sources can give you a general idea to whether or not this agency is reputable in the way it is accountable to its business practices.

Now, after that initial prerequisite to look into and/or understand, here’s the next dimension to appreciate. Where is the agency? What is that city’s “market”? For example, how many and what kinds of clients are in its market? Are they Fashion clients? Are they Commercial clients? The market is a reflection of the kind of work that an agency may be likely to offer its models. (Current trends for markets throughout the United States and International markets and the role your modeling agency can play in your diverse representation is also what a model needs to consider.)

A modeling agency can range from very small to very large, and even the types of models that an agency specializes in representing can be just as unique, so with that said, they know what they are looking for. People outside of this industry may think, “How hard is it to find a model?” Well, there are many ways that agencies see potential models, but they evaluate a model’s potential dependent upon how much money they anticipate that model earning while at their agency. The agency knows who their clients tend to be, and how many similar models they may have, so it’s a matter of supply and demand.

All modeling agencies have some form of interviewing and evaluating new models, so you can easily find out first by checking their website or calling and asking what their procedure is for accepting new models (ex. Will they be holding any “Open Calls”? Do they want you to just send a picture? etc.). There’s usually a time when the agency opens its doors for anyone to come in to be considered for representation. Most agencies will specify when they hold their open calls, or where you can send some snapshots or composite cards of yourself if you live out of their area. There are many other ways that agents can see new models and talent, too, such as referrals from scouts, other models, photographers, modeling conventions, modeling schools, pageants, modeling agencies from other cities, websites, and even clients. Some scouts are actually employed by a specific agency that knows what qualifications that their agency is looking for versus an independent scout that is able to receive a finder’s fee (and may even be eligible for a percentage of the model’s future earnings). Not every “discovery” is compensated by money, so it depends on the relationship of their association to the agency.

A modeling agency must be very selective to whom they represent. They may see hundreds of models, but there are industry standards that the agency must meet in order to fill their client’s needs. This is where your “look”, height, size, gender, experience and “market” are considered. The model is part of a group of individuals that work as a team in getting the job done, but there is usually more at stake financially for a client (and agency) when it comes down to either hiring the right model or going through the process of rejecting them. Business is business. Remember, an agency takes a commission out of the model’s rate for getting them the job, and they get a fee from the client, too, because they found them the model…(a.k.a. employment agency). Clients are the ones who select the model, so it’s in the agent’s best interest to find the right models because it’s a win-win situation for everyone.

As much as agents are always looking for new talent, there will be different standards of how much one-on-one training will be offered to the models it represents. It is in an agency’s best interest to make sure that their models that they are sending out on different jobs are up to par on the most basic requirements needed as a model. Agents can face a public relations nightmare (a.k.a. professional embarrassment) when one of their models represents their agency poorly. Some agencies may have a general manual that they hand out to all of their models that list their policies and standards that they want their models to follow.

It may offer more specific information, but there is a point that an agency may refer new models for photographic testing with certain photographers to further evaluate their abilities in front of a camera. Pictures are a tool that models and agencies use to market themselves, so this is part of the early process.

A model’s progress is watched and changes may be suggested by the agents for the model to follow such as losing weight, firming up (losing inches), adjusting hair style or color, improving personality, improving runway walk, and working on becoming more versatile to meet different client’s demands in front of the camera, on the runway, or at go-sees (interviews). Some of these things models can practice on their own in front of a mirror, but agencies may be able to ease the transition properly by having different individuals available to give models extra specialized training (usually at the model’s expense).

For instance, acting classes can help improve self-expression in front of a camera, on the runway, and auditioning for commercials & film, etc. Having a runway class helps a model be critiqued in ways that a model may not be personally aware of and able to practice and improve. Models may be referred to consultants or classes where make-up artists demonstrate the many different applications of makeup used in the industry and basic skin care, while hair-stylists work in assisting new models with different looks and styling techniques.

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