logo
From chiseled six-packs to sharp cheekbones, prosthetics are on the rise in fashion

From chiseled six-packs to sharp cheekbones, prosthetics are on the rise in fashion

CNN01-04-2025
For his Fall-Winter 2025 show at Paris Fashion Week, Dutch designer Duran Lantink continued to break the mold with his offbeat designs. Set in an office space that wouldn't look out of place in the science fiction thriller 'Severance,' the collection featured silhouettes with warped proportions, as well as eye-catching styles that included zany animal prints and butt-revealing jeans.
But it was two prosthetic torsos that stole the show. First, was a chiseled six-pack sported by model Mica Argañaraz. Then came the buxom climax: Chandler Frye, an emerging male model, wore a pair of big, bouncing breasts.
Videos of Lantink's outrageous antics racked up millions of views on social media as commenters argued over whether it championed gender-fluidity or ridiculed femininity. For Lantink, it was about toying with the idea of humans as dolls. 'I love the idea of women as action figures,' he wrote in the show notes.
Perhaps so, but it also tapped into a growing trend on the runways: prosthetics. In recent seasons, fashion brands including Martine Rose, Collina Strada and Balenciaga have used implants, masks and 3D makeup techniques to transform models into animals, aliens and cyborgs. Most memorably, Stockholm-based fashion label Avavav, known for its madcap latex creations, made a wearable replica of Kim Kardashian's backside out of silicone.
'(Designers are using) prosthetics to challenge beauty norms and explore transformation and identity, creating a broader cultural narrative,' said Tanya Noor, a course leader of the Hair, Makeup and Prosthetics for Performance undergraduate program at London College of Fashion, over an email.
The oldest known medical prosthetics (two artificial toes) date back to ancient Egypt, where they were used as walking aids. Approximately 300 years later, in 300BC, came the first known prosthetic leg; made from bronze and wood, it was thought to have been worn by a Roman nobleman. Following the American Civil War in 1860, more advanced wooden limbs with rubber cushioning were created to meet the needs of new amputees.
Then, prosthetics were adopted for the purpose of art and entertainment. At the dawn of cinema, in 1895, prosthetics were created through a crude concoction of materials including gum, cotton and wax. By the 1930s, the invention of foam latex saw rubber masks become commercially available for the first time thanks to prop maker Don Post, earning him the moniker 'The Godfather of Halloween.' For the first time, lifelike faces were readily available for both performers and punters. Elsewhere, prosthetics came to play a key role in the art form of drag, where performers use prosthetic breastplates and hip pads to show varying forms of femininity.
Today, the results are more striking than ever: the 2024 horror film 'The Substance' won an Oscar for the prosthetics worn by actors Demi Moore and Margaret Qualley to achieve visceral looks (though Qualley later revealed that the prosthetics caused her skin damage that took a year to recover).
They've become a bigger part of red carpet fashion, too. Malina Stearns, a special effects makeup artist, masterminded Doja Cat's look at the 2023 Met Gala, where the popstar embodied Karl Lagerfeld's beloved cat in a custom Oscar de la Renta gown and facial prosthetics. Stearns has also worked with musicians on other creations including the alien that featured in Sabrina Carpenter's 2024 VMAs performance, SZA's bug-eyed album cover and the crocodile-inspired cheeks and chest pieces worn by Doechii.
Lantink isn't the only one to use prosthetics to subvert gender norms, either. 'I've applied many fake boobs to men and vice versa,' Stearns said, over email.
While materials such as latex are still industry standard when it comes to prosthetics, 3D scanning and printing is allowing for even more complex creations. And fashion, increasingly taking cues from the world of entertainment, is now raiding its props department.
In 2019, Balenciaga worked with makeup artist Inge Grognard to create extremely accentuated cheekbones and pouts on the models who walked its runway show. Visual artist and photographer Nadia Lee Cohen used an array of prosthetics, wigs and costumes to change into 33 characters for her 2022 'HELLO My Name Is' project, as she reimagined the person behind each name tag found in a thrift shop. Meanwhile, drag queen Alexis Stone regularly attends Paris Fashion Week as a different celebrity doppelganger each season (most recently, she transformed into Adele, a process which took six weeks of research, sculpting and makeup).
A longtime proponent of prosthetics, makeup artist and entrepreneur Isamaya Ffrench has turned models into elfin-eared creatures for Burberry; extraterrestrials for Paco Rabanne; and animals for Collina Strada. 'The (Spring-Summer 2023) show was about breaking down the artificial barriers we put up between ourselves and the planet. So, the idea of transforming models into these hybrid human-animals just felt right,' said Collina Strada's founder Hillary Taymour over email.
The prosthetics were purchased from a props studio, and then hand-painted and pierced, to 'feel organic and slightly uncanny,' said Taymour. She had hoped for them to be 'wearable in a high-fashion way' and not come across as gimmicky or party shop fodder. 'These weren't just masks; they were full-on transformations,' she said.
When used in fashion, prosthetics have served as commentary on a reality where fillers and facelifts have become more commonplace. Martine Rose sent models with fake noses down the runway at Milan Fashion Week last June in a bid to challenge Eurocentric beauty standards. 'The first thing you see in people is often their nose. And it is often the first thing they change about themselves,' she told Vogue.
However, Stearns observed that while a 'plastic surgery look is always popular and people want to enhance (their appearance),' the rise of prosthetics in fashion may have more to do with 'art than cosmetics.' While cosmetics procedures are typically undertaken discreetly to enhance or conceal features, the prosthetics used on the runway are frequently designed to be noticed — a key draw for designers vying to create standout, scroll-stopping moments. 'The desire to create eye-catching content and viral moments lends itself well to the combination of fashion and prosthetics,' Noor said.
Taymour views prosthetics as a canvas for artistic expression. 'Fashion has always been about identity play, but prosthetics take it to another level,' she said. 'They let us completely rewrite the human form — why stop at styling clothes when you can style bodies?'
Mollie Gibb, a lecturer of the aforementioned hair, makeup and prosthetics course in London, echoed this sentiment, saying that prosthetics are a way for hair and makeup artists to create looks 'in line with the statements that the clothes are making.'
Some practical and progressive solutions have appeared on the runway. Alexander McQueen's Spring-Summer 1999 show featured a Paralympic athlete and double amputee wearing carved prosthetic legs. More recently, emerging designer Zhongzhi Ding created jeans with a built-in penis (complete with a workable urethral) made from sponge. They were inspired by Tom of Finland, an artist known for creating highly masculinized homoerotic art, and aimed at transgender men who want to wear gender-affirming clothing.
Ding linked the rising interest in prosthetics to body image anxiety. Over email, he shared his belief that 'in the future, (there will be) a demand for prosthetics targeting more body parts.' For the most part, though, prosthetics in fashion remain a work of fantasy over utility.
Taymour thinks there's scope for prosthetics to 'go beyond just the face and hands' and 'be used in full silhouette transformations' that also include dynamic movement. 'Right now, a lot of prosthetics are static, but imagine if they had animatronics or soft robotics built in — like a dress that breathes or a tail that sways,' she mused. 'Fashion should always have a sense of fantasy, so let's take it even further.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The U.S.'s First Kurdish Restaurant Serves Homey, Affordable Food in West Side
The U.S.'s First Kurdish Restaurant Serves Homey, Affordable Food in West Side

Eater

time41 minutes ago

  • Eater

The U.S.'s First Kurdish Restaurant Serves Homey, Affordable Food in West Side

is a Minneapolis-based independent writer with an affinity for the Great Plains, who publishes place-based, narrative nonfiction stories in a variety of local, national, and international outlets. The cool thing about the Twin Cities restaurant scene is it's never trying too hard. Case in point is Babani's, a Kurdish restaurant in St. Paul. Having opened way back in 1997, this small, family-run, no-frills restaurant named after owner Jamal's tribe is widely considered the first Kurdish restaurant in the United States. Once located in downtown St. Paul and now tucked into an inconspicuous industrial space overflowing with parking options in the capital city's West Side neighborhood, Babani's has been going strong slinging affordable and flavorful Kurdish food for nearly 30 years. The vibe Stepping inside, you'll find the accoutrements of a small but successful family restaurant — friendly, kind, and attentive service without the over-the-top, customer-above-all insincerity that often defines U.S. dining. Lanterns hang from the ceiling, woven tapestries dot the walls, and retro Arabic music fills the air. Rich smells waft through the small but warm seven-table dining room from the nearby kitchen. Cinnamon Janzer Cinnamon Janzer As my husband and I took our seats, we joined other diners who ranged from a young couple with a baby, an older family with a grandmother who cooed over said baby on her way out, two groups of friends getting together, and another couple having a casual dinner date, too. The food Babani's serves dishes from Iraq's Kurdistan region, or Southern Kurdistan as it's known by Kurds themselves. The Kurds are an ethnic group with their own culture and language, but lack a homeland with its own boundaries. Rather, most Kurds occupy a region that stretches into the borders of Iraq, Iran, Turkey, and Syria. The vegetarian-friendly menu at Babani's is sparse — there are 12 items total on the dinner menu, some of which vary only by which rice they come with — but each is excellent and deeply flavorful. The portions are healthy, but big eaters like my husband will likely require an app to leave full. The chicken tawa, which features the poultry sauteed in lemon before being baked with layers of peppers, potatoes, onions, and dried limes, is a standout. But the effort it takes to prepare it means that Babani's only offers it on Fridays and Saturdays, so plan accordingly if you want to sample it. The dowjic soup at Babani's has a lemon chicken flavor punched up by creamy yogurt. But there are plenty of other notable dishes and drinks to savor no matter the day. I had the chicken kebabs with biryani, a baked rice dish that features peas, raisins, and vegetables — the chicken was perfectly grilled with exactly the smokey, charred flavor I hoped for. With the chicken tawa off the menu during our Thursday evening visit, my husband got the same but with basmati rice. I opted for the dowjic soup — a lemony, yogurt-y chicken soup — for my side while my husband went with the tabbouleh salad that popped with fresh parsley and lemon juice. When it comes to drinks, there's standard soda options alongside teas. But it's the Kurdish lemonade made with whole lemons and dried limes that's a must-try — and at just $3 a glass, the ice-tea-like drink is an affordable addition to an already affordable, entirely filling meal at the only Kurdish restaurant in town. The service Cinnamon Janzer Cinnamon Janzer As soon as we sat down, the dark-haired woman who was the sole server greeted us with a warm hello, a big smile, menus, rolled silverware, and large red plastic cups teeming with water. With cheery yet entirely uneffusive grandma vibes, she happily told us about what the menu featured, what was and wasn't available during our visit, and relished in our delightful enjoyment of the flavorful food we got to eat. The service at Babani's fits right into the restaurant's overall approach — it feels like you've been invited to a dinner party at someone's house. They're clearly eager to share their food and the culture behind it with you, but you won't find any over-the-top service antics here, which is exactly what makes Babani's the understated gem that it is. Hot tip If I had to guess, Babani's is an enterprise that the owners surely care about — it has been going strong for almost 30 years, after all — but isn't their entire life. They're closed on Sundays and Mondays, only make their signature chicken tawa dish on Fridays and Saturdays, close the kitchen around 7:30 p.m. before closing at 8 p.m., and stop serving the kubay brinij and bakla around 7 p.m. You've got to work around their schedule to get certain dishes, and I wouldn't want it to be any other way than the way it authentically is. Babani's Kurdish Restaurant is located at 32 Fillmore Avenue E in St. Paul; 651-602-9964; open 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday through Friday and 2 p.m. to 8 p.m. on Saturday; closed Sunday and Monday.

Apple TV Plus streaming service to cost $2 more per month in Canada
Apple TV Plus streaming service to cost $2 more per month in Canada

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Apple TV Plus streaming service to cost $2 more per month in Canada

TORONTO — Prices are going up at the house of "Ted Lasso" and "Severance." Apple TV Plus has announced it's raising the cost to watch its streaming programs by $2 per month in Canada. Apple says it will now charge $14.99 a month, while the annual subscription price will remain at $129 per year. It's the first time the technology giant has hiked the fees at Apple TV Plus since late 2023. Other major streaming services, including Netflix and Amazon's Prime Video, have made similar moves in recent months, part of an effort to squeeze more profits out of viewers' shift away from traditional cable packages. While Apple TV Plus hosts a more limited selection of programming than its competitors, the brand has forged a reputation for its lavish productions, which include TV series "Silo" and "The Morning Show," as well as films "The Gorge" and best picture Oscar winner "Coda." The service also hosts major league soccer and baseball games. Earlier this year, Apple TV Plus launched its first app for Android devices, giving users of non-Apple phones and tablets mobile access to its entertainment library. This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 21, 2025. David Friend, The Canadian Press Error while retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data

Brent Hinds, former Mastodon guitarist and vocalist, dies in Atlanta motorcycle crash at 51
Brent Hinds, former Mastodon guitarist and vocalist, dies in Atlanta motorcycle crash at 51

NBC News

time2 hours ago

  • NBC News

Brent Hinds, former Mastodon guitarist and vocalist, dies in Atlanta motorcycle crash at 51

Brent Hinds, former guitarist and vocalist with Grammy-winning heavy metal band Mastodon, died in a motorcycle crash in Atlanta late Wednesday night, police said, leaving bandmates in a state of "unfathomable sadness and grief." He was 51. Hinds, co-founder of the critically acclaimed and influential Atlanta-based band, was on top of his Harley Davidson heading west on Boulevard SE at 11:35 p.m. when he collided with a BMW SUV at the intersection of Memorial Drive SE, the Atlanta Police Department said in statement. The woman driving the BMW "failed to yield while turning left " but remained at the scene. "We are in a state of unfathomable sadness and grief … last night Brent Hinds passed away as a result of a tragic accident," Mastodon said in statement on Friday. "We are heartbroken, shocked, and still trying to process the loss of this creative force with whom we've shared so many triumphs, milestones, and the creation of music that has touched the hearts of so many. Our hearts are with Brent's family, friends, and fans." Hinds was a part of six Grammy nominations and Mastodon won for best metal performance in 2018 with "Sultan's Curse."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store