Apple Martin appears in the January 2026 Self Portrait editorial, photographed in several distinct outfits that highlight texture, mood, and natural authenticity.

January 2026. Apple Martin stretched across a tree branch, light blue top and skirt soft against rough bark. Water below, foliage around. The pose direct, gaze steady. The contrast between fabric and nature feels raw, almost unfinished.

Another frame, water again. A cream dress flowing, sleeveless, fabric loose. One arm raised, the other resting. The reflection faint, the surface calm. The image ethereal, but not polished. More like a pause, a breath.

Third look, sharper. Pink textured outfit with black trim, embroidered words “Soft & Sweet” near the hip. Kneeling among tall plants, hair blonde, shoes black. The pose deliberate, gaze straight at the lens. The outfit playful, but the setting grounds it.

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Rachel McAdams modeled a pale blue blouse and dramatic olive sculptural skirt against a New York skyline for her 2026 Hunger Magazine photoshoot.

She stands on a marble sill, dusk flooding the glass, Midtown steel behind her. Rachel McAdams–back to us, face turned in half profile–wears a whisper-thin powder-blue blouse tucked into an olive skirt that blooms outward like unruly origami. The skirt’s folds hover at hip level, all angles and petals, then taper to a clean hem that shows miles of leg before black suede pumps close the sentence. No jewelry drama. Just one silver hoop catching the last light.

The frame turns a simple window into a stage, and the clothes into mood music. Hunger Magazine has never chased safe styling; this spread leans into that edge by pairing board-room shirting with near-sculptural volume. One sharp thought: when a garment builds out from the body instead of hugging it, the wearer looks like she’s negotiating space, not just occupying it.

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Kendall Jenner wore a cream knit crop top and matching lounge pants for the Alo 2026 campaign photoshoot.

A blank brick wall, late-day sun, and Kendall Jenner standing side-profile like a punctuation mark. The frame is stripped down–no props, no wind machine–so the clothes hum a little louder. She’s in a butter-cream ribbed set from Alo: a shrunken cardigan shrugged open just enough to show torso curve, and slouchy knit trousers that graze the pavement. A deep-green shoulder bag slots under one arm, the only pop against all that softness. Black slide flats ground the look, while a red claw clip pins her hair into a loose topknot. One quick upload turns the shot into a textbook celebrity photoshoot reference–athleisure turned almost sculptural.

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This is 2026’s wellness aesthetic distilled: comfort fabric cut to reveal discipline underneath. Knitwear once meant couch days; now it moonlights as body armor for the camera. Sharp insight: when athleisure strips away performance logos and keeps only silhouette, it stops selling workouts and starts selling lifestyle mythology.

Critique. From a side angle the cardigan bunches at the under-bust, risking “hiked-up afterthought” instead of intentional crop; a single hidden snap could tame the fold. Still, the tonal calm, punctured only by that forest-green bag, whispers confidence louder than any neon set. Soft fabric, hard intent–Jenner proves lounging can look like a plan, not a pause.

Would you keep the cardigan casually hitched for attitude, or button it low for a cleaner, columnar line?