Jisoo appears on the January 2026 cover of Elle Singapore, styled in a pastel halter dress with tulips in hand, reflecting on growth, joy, and artistic evolution.
January 2026. Light blue backdrop, pink tulips clutched gently. Jisoo stands centered, dress textured, pastel-toned, halter neckline clean. A black choker wraps her neck, sharp contrast against softness.
The cover reads quiet. “Artiste in Bloom.” A phrase that fits. She’s not posing — she’s pausing. The bouquet isn’t staged, it’s held. Her gaze steady, not dramatic. Just present.
Inside, the story unfolds. Jisoo speaks of slowing down, of winter’s quiet, of peeling tangerines under blankets. She recalls a meteor shower mid-flight, stars streaking past like they belonged to her. Her voice, she says, shifts with each song — lower, more delicate, more honest. She’s not chasing perfection anymore. She’s chasing feeling.
Her duet with Zayn, “EYES CLOSED,” surprised even her. The video felt surreal, space-like. The song, about love without sight, became a turning point. She’s prepping a solo album, still touring with BLACKPINK, still learning how to protect herself. “Perfect love doesn’t exist,” she says. “But understanding — that’s something.”
Jisoo’s editorial isn’t about fashion tricks. It’s about fragments — tulips, choker, snow, stars, and a voice that keeps changing.
Odessa A’zion appears in W Magazine’s Best Performances Issue for January 2026, photographed by Tyrone Lebon in a feathered cream outfit with red heels against a vibrant party backdrop.
January 2026. Disco ball overhead, colored lights scattering across the room. Odessa A’zion crouched low, cigarette in hand, outfit feathered cream, texture soft but unruly. Red heels sharp against the floor.
Her look: sleeves heavy with feathers, fabric layered, cream tone catching the glow. The pose deliberate, almost awkward, but alive. Hair loose, makeup understated. No fuss, no gloss. Just grit and fabric.
Naomi Watts appears in Woman & Home South Africa January 2026, reflecting on resilience, reinvention, and her journey from childhood challenges to global fame and advocacy.
January 2026. Beige gradient backdrop, bold typography stamped “STILL RISING.” Naomi Watts framed in words more than images, her story carried by text rather than fabric or pose.
Her journey reads uneven, lived‑in. Childhood marked by loss, father gone early, mother a designer, artistry humming in the background. England, Wales, then Australia — constant movement, accents shifting, sadness stitched into memory but never without love. Acting came sideways, through modeling, wardrobe work, styling. Then a friend’s invitation to an acting workshop cracked something open. She said yes. That yes became the pivot.