![]() Amber Valletta wears jacket and pants by Stella McCartney. Speaking to NET-A-PORTER’s weekly digital magazine, PORTER, supermodel Amber Valletta talks about being arrested in Washington, DC, alongside Jane Fonda during the climate-change protests in November 2019: “I chose to get arrested. I’ve been feeling this need to get loud to step into my own. The fierce activist refuses to sleepwalk into the abyss and is already seen as a leader in sustainability in fashion. Speaking about creating change within the industry, she tells PORTER: “We want to educate and entertain fashion consumers on sustainability. Fashion has such an opportunity to be a change agent.” She is a bottomless pit of advice. Her tip to those looking to shop more ethically is investment purchasing. Her universal wardrobe? “I believe in a great blazer, a pair of boots and tennis shoes. Valletta’s passion for the environment was first stirred in 2000, when she was living in California as a new mother. She later enrolled in a class at NYU in the wake of Al Gore’s early conversations around climate change and is now seen as a key contributor within the fashion industry to climate change and safeguarding our planet. I’ll be dead, but my great-grandkids? To live in a world where they wouldn’t experience this. Where they couldn’t see elephants or a whale. The ocean could be disgusting and full of plastic you can’t eat fish, go to a beach, see coral you can’t have the opportunity to be doctors or scientists or creators. Valletta rose to fame during the iconic ’90s ‘super’ era, alongside friends Kate Moss and Christy Turlington. She began modelling at 15 and lived with fellow supermodel Shalom Harlow. The model cites the decision to have her hair cut short as having led to her big break, and her first Vogue cover: “When I had my hair cut short, that changed everything. Suddenly, I went from ‘that girl’ to ‘who’s that girl?’”Īmber Valletta wears jeans by Goldsign, t-shirt by Ninety Percent, rings by Sophie Buhai and Poppy Finch. Photographed by David Luraschi for Porter. All items can be purchased straight from the magazine pages via NET-A-PORTER.COM. Reflecting on changes within the fashion industry, Valletta sees one stark contrast between now and then – less ego-baiting: “You would never have taken your Polaroid camera and turned it around on yourself. ![]() You would never have talked about how you were flying around in a private jet. That’s why when Linda made that one statement, it was huge. People talk like that all the time on Instagram now. However, a few years ago, the camera was inevitably turned on the supermodel, when she was filmed speaking at a MindBodyGreen conference about having been sober for the past 25 years following an addiction to alcohol and drugs. Valletta speaks candidly about her sobriety: “Only by being sober do I have any chance of survival. Left to my own devices, I guarantee you no matter how much I love life, my family, if I take a drink or any of my drugs of choice, I’ll be dead. I’ll ruin everything.” This honesty is what makes the model so refreshing in an ever-self-conscious world and why she refuses to sit on the sidelines. “I don’t want to talk it, I want to live it. I want to allow myself the space to have bad days, be sad, be mad, be loving and accepting of others. Even people that I don’t think are right. It’s hard to do, but I want to move through the world as gently as I can.”įor PORTER’s shoot, Valletta was photographed by David Luraschi and styled by Helen Broadfoot. Shot in LA, it captures the beauty of eternal elegance, with Valletta wearing sustainably-made pieces by Stella McCartney, Casasola, Emma Willis, Matteau, Goldsign and more. Valletta on her arrest in Washington, DC, during the climate-change protests in November last year: “I chose to get arrested. I’ve been feeling this need to get loud, to step into my own. My life is worth putting out there, in order to show that all our lives are worth fighting for.” I can’t sit on the sidelines, I need to physically put myself on the line. Valletta on why it was important to make noise and speak up at this moment in time: “I believe in this.
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