This site has limited support for your browser. We recommend switching to Edge, Chrome, Safari, or Firefox.

10% discount on your first purchase with code WELCOME10

Congratulations! Your order qualifies for free shipping You are missing €200 for your order with free shipping costs

10% of

Shopping cart 0

Estimate shipping
Congratulations! Your order qualifies for free shipping You have €200 left for free shipping
No more products available for purchase

Is this a gift?
Add order notes
Subtotal Free
View cart
Shipping, taxes, and discount codes are calculated at checkout

NATALIA LACUNZA FOR VOGUE SPAIN

THIS IS HOW TO WEAR MEN'S STYLE, BY NATALIA LACUNZA

By María José Pérez Méndez
February 19, 2020
Photography: Andrea Savall
Styling: Berta Álvarez
Makeup and hair: Lucía Pando
Production: Sira Lebón
Styling assistant: Raquel Brito
“There are still things I’m not 100% comfortable with, although I know I have to be brave and dare to try them. I’m getting happier all the time.” Talking to Natalia Lacunza (Pamplona, ​​1999) is to witness an exercise in honesty that, from the outside, would be easy to attribute to a general characteristic of Generation Z. But those who followed her journey on the show that gave her her first wave of popularity, Operación Triunfo, will know that straightforward, unadorned sincerity is as much a part of the singer’s daily life as the clothes that define her, chinos.” black, turtleneck sweater , a t-shirt with swag above and sneakers or ankle boots.” “Honestly, I look my best when I’m super simple and comfortable . But it depends on the situation. If I’m happy with the look, it’s because I see my body proportions as well-balanced, for example,” she continues, explaining what has become one of her main communication pillars: her image . “How someone dresses tells me a lot about them , and I ’m also aware that what I wear can impact other people , although I think I still have a long way to go to convey everything I want,” she reflects. “If I look at my outfits in general, I see many different things ; I see masculine and feminine garments, together and separately.” “I don’t think you can draw a crystal-clear conclusion from the outside yet, but I try to reflect flexibility ,” she says, while revealing one of the key elements reflected both in her Instagram profile and in each of her public appearances: a careful balance between masculine and feminine , which for her depends more on how the garment is worn than on the piece itself. Just as she demonstrated in the editorial for the November issue of Vogue Spain ; just as you see in these photos.
 
To read more about the interview, visit Vogue.es