Ashley Greene showcases a variety of early-career looks for Next Level Apparel, bridging the gap between basic studio work and celebrity photoshoot culture.
There is a certain raw, unvarnished quality to this 2004 session with Ashley Greene. It is not a fashion photoshoot in the sense of high-gloss art; it feels more like a working day. The frames capture her in a wide range of outfits, though the specific clothes almost matter less than the way she occupies the space. It is a styled shoot that feels surprisingly grounded, lacking the heavy-handed retouching we have grown used to. The lighting is flat, honest—a studio portrait setup that refuses to hide the textures of the fabric or the skin.
Ashley Greene navigates a variety of early-career ensembles at Sutra in 2006, blending a raw celebrity photoshoot energy with mid-2000s nightlife aesthetics.
Ashley Greene at the Sutra event in 2006 feels like a frantic, unrehearsed exercise in mid-aughts identity. It is a fashion photoshoot captured in the wild, under the unflattering, yellow-tinted glow of a lounge. There is no high fashion safety net here. Looking at the collection of outfits—ranging from structured denim to those thin, somewhat clingy knits—you get a sense of a styled shoot that was perhaps styled by the actor herself, or a friend with a very specific 2006 vision.
Gracie Abrams wore a black sleeveless top with lace texture and Chanel gold jewelry for the Coco Crush campaign in 2026.
The Chanel “Coco Crush” campaign frames Gracie Abrams in a pared‑down way. No clutter, no backdrop noise. Just her profile, jewelry, and a black sleeveless top that catches light with a faint lace or sequin shimmer.
The necklace — a textured gold choker — sits heavy but clean against her collarbone. Earrings stacked on the left ear: a small hoop, then a thin curved band above it. Nothing extravagant, just deliberate layering. The hair is short, straight, dark, cut to emphasize the line of the jaw.