
New York Model Management–Among the usual suspects who have proven to be casting favorites, ranging from Alexander Johansson and Philipp Bierbaum to Charlie France, New York Model Management gets a fresh boost this season with several hot commodities fresh off the runway from Milan and Paris. Racking up shows left and right this month, Andrey Smidl comes out on top as one to watch, followed by new faces Onnys Aho, Todd Taylor and Jordan Postrel.

WhyNot–Making a casting director’s job less difficult, WhyNot pulls out all the stops with a consistent showing of irresistible options. As the last year has shown, David Gandy is unstoppable – racking up two major covers and continuing to play a strong suit to Dolce & Gabbana’s image. Meanwhile, there is Arthur Kulkov, a one fits all type of model and a blast to have around – followed by those standout editorial boys like Jacob Coupe and Alexander Johansson, who easily transition from the runway, walking coveted spots for labels such as Prada to fronting campaigns for a myriad of brands. From Garrett Neff to Aiden Andrews and Adam Senn, the recognizable faces are offered in plenitude and short of a world disaster, it looks like the men of WhyNot are going to have full charts.

Boys In Town- JM Ferrater lenses a series of portraits of over a dozen boys for the twenty-fourth issue of Metal magazine. Among those chosen are Adrian Wlodarski, Tomek Szczukiecki, Joan Mirangels, Joan Pedrola, Felix Branch, Jacob Coupe, Tobias Sørensen, Jon Kortajarena, Charlie Westerberg, Jakob Wiechmann, Viggo Jonasson, Alexander Johansson, Johannes Linder, Adrian Bosch, Christopher Michaut, and Elias Cafmeyer, all styled by Ana de Gregorio. / Hair by Dani Rull

Wearing garments from Lucile Puton, Dominique model Elias Cafmeyer sits for a portrait session with Martin Bing. Producing striking images for his book, Elias is an up and coming model fresh off an active Paris Fashion Week that included Ann Demeulemeester, Cerruti and other designers. Currently he is in Tokyo for work.

The most recent issue of The Room features breakout designer Damir Doma. Lensed by Gregory Derkenne, the minimalist spread enlists Elias Cafmeyer, Helen Feskens, Jurgen Masure, Suzy Bird and Viktor Mikus. Keeping in line with Damir Doma’s signature aesthetic, stylist Benoit Béthume drapes select pieces from the latest range against nude models. Accompanying Derkenne and Béthume’s work is an interview in which Doma talks about everything from his influences and design philosophy to the decision behind his recent Silent and womenswear lines. Of particular interest was Doma’s reasoning behind his recent diffusion line: “Silent was conceived for the reason that the positioning and the pricepoint of my collection is quite high and there are so many people who cannot afford it. At a certain point, I just felt very uncomfortable with this situation. I had people writing me emails that they love what I do and they adore my work, but it’s so expensive. As a young designer with a young brand, it’s not very unusual to start something like this so early, but I just tried to do something that is more accessible for more people.”
Note — Nudity