Supermodels On Trampolines ^new^

In the iconic 1998 Vogue editorial shot by Mario Testino, a then-unknown Carmen Kass was asked to "jump like no one is watching." The resulting images show her suspended in mid-air, a slip dress frozen in the act of defying Newton. Her face is serene, as if levitation is simply another Tuesday. That is the secret: while the rest of us flail on a trampoline, arms windmilling, mouths open in silent terror, the supermodel treats the vertical axis as merely another runway. Left foot, right foot, up .

The trampoline changes everything.

Filmed on a stark set with director David Fincher at the helm, the video wasn’t just a promotion for a song; it was a coronation. Seeing these untouchable icons in leather jackets and denim, laughing and defying gravity, humanized them. It showed the world that the "Super" in Supermodel wasn't just about looking perfect; it was about having fun, taking up space, and radiating a joy that was infectious. supermodels on trampolines

Of course, behind every perfect airborne shot is a blooper reel of epic proportions. The supermodel mystique crumbles on the third bounce when you land on the spring. Naomi Campbell once reportedly fired a trampoline. (The trampoline, not the model. The model was fine.) In the iconic 1998 Vogue editorial shot by

For a brief, glorious period in the late 90s and early 2000s, photographers realized that the only thing more captivating than a 6-foot-tall goddess standing still was that same goddess being launched 15 feet into the air, hair whipping like a flag in a hurricane, limbs akimbo, face caught between a snarl and a giggle. Left foot, right foot, up