Lana Del Rey. Photo by Kristy Sparow/Getty Images. For those who don’t know, the coquette trend dreamy, ultra-girly trend that has taken the internet by storm. It’s all about romanticism, from how you live your daily life to your aesthetic. The aesthetic itself is all about bows, pe...
who skillfully styled Lana’s mane with a sleekmiddle part, fullness, andstraightperfection. It’s a throwback to Lana’s dark golden blonde era from 2012, but with a modern twist – the darker roots transition and the lighter, clearer blonde hair elevate the entire aesthetic....
Born to Diehelped Lana garner a cult following, and even helped popularize a “Tumblr girl” and “Instagram hottie” aesthetic. Over the past decade, Lana has played around with her look, and although she’s traded in the flower crowns, croptowns and white gowns for sweaters, baseball caps...
“Ride,” from 2012’sParadiseEP, marked a shift in musical style and visual aesthetic for Del Rey. Unlike the trip-hop-infused pop and noir-inspired visuals ofBorn to Die, “Ride” telegraphed the more rootsy direction the artist would take on her follow-up,Ultraviolence. Directed by Anth...
Lana Del Rey photographed for Harper’s BAZAAR Art Issue.Collier Schorr “It’s almost like they were wrong,” she concluded of the naysayers. “That’s all. They just got it all wrong. That’s all.” In service of her point, Del Rey is up for five awards at next year’s Grammys...
Lana Del Rey Debuts ‘West Coast’ in Star-Making Coachella Set Instead, she hands the bulk of theproduction duties to Black Keys frontman Dan Auerbach, whose back-to-basics rock ‘n’ roll aesthetic serves these tracks well. Auerbach offers a more sedate take on the “Born to...
Credit Del Rey’s strong aesthetic and singular throwback sound that, as it has moved away from its initial pop and hip-hop influences, has kept young fans interested and allowed them to grow up with her. “When we sign [an artist], it’s not necessarily what everyone was listening to,...
Del Rey provided no other details about the project, although she did pair the audio with a hazy black-and-white Polaroid of her wiping her eye with her thumb. “country era is coming,” one fan commented, while another person added, “Ah, so is this what you’ve been cooking up here...
From her lyrics to her imagery, Del Rey has long been synonymous with Coachella and its aesthetic. She even played on that synergy with billboards leading into Indio that read “Has anyone else died for you?”— a reference to how Del Rey was effectively crucified by the media after her...
“Ultraviolence” go Full Rock: they lack immediacy, yet Del Rey’s aesthetic is now defined enough that she doesn’t need to craft earworms in order to beguile fans. It’s a move that recalls “Yeezus,” which was less accessible than Kanye West’s previous output but was honest in ...