The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Professor’s style turns heads

Blogging launches second career as a model for 63-year-old.

- By Tara Bahrampour Washington Post

Like many women, Lyn Slater was not thrilled when she started experienci­ng the physical signs of age. But she was even less happy about the “solutions” she saw: the anti-aging serums, the dying of hair, even the rhetoric. “Retirement,” for example. “It means that you kind of fade into the background. You retire, and you dress very comfortabl­y, and you’re taking care of grandchild­ren. The antidote our culture has come up with — antiaging — it’s like we’re against aging.”

Instead of going with that narrative, the 63-year-old Fordham University professor of social work turned to a realm that has long been associated with the young: fashion. By most objective standards she has conquered it. Her Instagram account — largely comprising photos of herself in striking couture — has over 200,000 followers, with some photos garnering over 50,000 likes. Her blog has fans from around the world. She has modeled for Valentino Eyewear, Mango and Uniqlo, and in February she signed with Elite Models London.

Ruffled white collars, wideleg trousers, textured blouses, skinny jeans, oversized glasses — all curated by a woman with a lifelong love of clothes who knows how to rock them. And her audience isn’t a bunch of old ladies. The vast majority are women between 18 and 35, who gush in the comments thread.

“I live for this lady!”

“You make me feel fearless about getting older.”

“Slay my life Lyn!!!!!” “You are a muse.”

At first, their reaction surprised her.

“I never intended to address aging; I don’t have an agenda,” she said. “But somehow I have become an alternativ­e of aging that young people embrace.”

Although she had always paid attention to fashion, most of her life work had been more cerebral. Along with teaching, she helped establish the first child advocacy centers in New York City, developed a handbook for family court judges and helped develop Fordham Law School’s Interdisci­plinary Center for Family and Child Advocacy.

“I’d made my name in my career, raised my daughter. I was ready to do something new.” So she signed up for classes at the Fashion Institute of Technology and Parsons School of Design. “I was always the oldest person in the room but the young people would say, ‘Ah, your sense of style; you should start a blog.’ “

She did, posting photos of herself and ruminating about the sense of style she had honed over a lifetime.

She was Catholic schoolgirl (required to wear a uniform) in Westcheste­r County in the 1960s and early 70s, at a time when clothing was a key to rebellion.

“I wanted to look like Grace Slick from Jefferson Airplane — the love beads, the platform shoes,” she said. “I started to collect pieces which transcende­d trends — they were timeless and ageless.”

After she started a blog and an Instagram account, things snowballed. The editor of Grey Magazine spotted her and did a cover and editorial, and then she was picked up by BuzzFeed and other sites.

Like any master practition­er, she doesn’t go for trends, but rather follows her instinct. “If I want to express my intellectu­al self, or if I want to be a little bit provocativ­e or seductive, I choose clothes that do that for me.”

But one thing she doesn’t try to do is to look young.

“I don’t retouch my photos. I leave the wrinkles. I’m not a model, in my opinion, although I’ve become one now.”

In fact, that natural approach is apparently what has captivated her young followers.

“A woman wrote and said, ‘I’ve spent the last half-hour trying to get my eyebrow perfect and my friend sent me your link and it made me think, what am I doing? I’m just going to be me and put down the brush.’ “

Now, along with teaching, she gives TED talks, speaks at conference­s, and attends fashion events around the world. Many of her fans live in Asia, where her combinatio­n of style and hardcore academic credential­s resonates.

“In China for Fashion Week I was literally flooded by young people,” she said. “The version of aging that their parents show isn’t what they want, and yet they’re still traditiona­l. They like the fact that I’m a professor, a Ph.D, two masters, and I’m a mother and I’m a grandmothe­r and yet I’m still doing this. And I’m not over the top. I’m still a woman who’s very much in the world, and although I’m pushing it I’m not inappropri­ate.”

In the United States, too, she said, “I think young people are really tired of the way we talk about aging. They want to believe that they can keep becoming and reinventin­g throughout their entire life. … They look at me and say, ‘You’re clearly saying, “I’m not 20 and I don’t want to be 20.”’ Whatever age you are, life is important to you and you have to make the most of it.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY CALVIN LOM ?? Fordham University professor Lyn Slater never planned to be a fashion icon.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY CALVIN LOM Fordham University professor Lyn Slater never planned to be a fashion icon.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY CALVIN LOM ?? Slater’s blog has fans from around the world, and she has modeled for Valentino Eyewear, Mango and Uniqlo, and in February she signed with Elite Models London.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY CALVIN LOM Slater’s blog has fans from around the world, and she has modeled for Valentino Eyewear, Mango and Uniqlo, and in February she signed with Elite Models London.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY ROY ZHANG ?? Lyn Slater’s Instagram account — largely comprising photos of herself in striking couture — has more than 200,000 followers, with some photos garnering more than 50,000 likes.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY ROY ZHANG Lyn Slater’s Instagram account — largely comprising photos of herself in striking couture — has more than 200,000 followers, with some photos garnering more than 50,000 likes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States