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From being a high-profile magazine editor and a street style magnet to helping build one of the most coveted online luxury fashion retailers, Taylor Tomasi Hill has been a fixture in the fashion industry for years. And her latest career venture is no small feat. In between building a start-up and taking care of her son, Tomasi Hill still finds a few moments of respite in her day for self-care. Keep reading to see how this fashion insider starts a typical workday in Dallas.
This helps me focus and is an excuse to stay in bed longer. What I pick ends up being what I have enough time to make. Yeah, I thought so. The battle every mom tackles daily: getting my kiddo dressed with hair and teeth brushed and packed up for school. Whatever gets the job done, right? All packed up and ready for school. He likes to dress himself, which is apparent on some days more than others.
Joe has worked as a creative consultant-at-large for the company, advising on everything from retail to restaurants, design, branding, and programming. For now, his at-large role is said to remain in tact. Beyond the magazine. Create Account. Already have an account? Remember me. Lost your password? I will say I am itching to get back to Tei-An for the seaweed salad. What is your favorite Dallas cocktail? In the hot Texas summer, nothing beats an ice-cold Ranch Water!
Topo Chico and tequila for you East Coast friends who might not know! Beyond the magazine. Create Account. Already have an account?
Remember me. Lost your password? Don't have an account? Get PC Daily delivered directly to your inbox — don't miss anything! PaperCity Magazine. In many ways, Taylor Tomasi-Hill 's career has evolved with the fashion industry, her resume reflecting how the tides — and perhaps more consequentially, the power brokers — have shifted. She was a magazine editor at the time when it was peak-glamourized in the popular imagination, when names on mastheads were starting to become street-style favorites.
Tomasi-Hill, with her penchant for prints and bright red hair, has long been a favorite subject of photographers waiting outside the shows at fashion week. She left publishing to work in e-commerce in , for a then-barely-year-old company called Moda Operandi.
Tomasi-Hill always had a connection to fashion, given that her parents owned a successful children's accessories showroom in Dallas. But she says the industry wasn't something she followed all that closely. It was the early s — "the height of the magazine," Tomasi-Hill remembers. And for the next decade, she'd have a front-row seat at the evolving job description of the fashion editor.
Now, it's very different: Editors are very forward-facing and brand-representative; some are influencers, some are more influential for publications and for brands," she explains.
And even as an editor, she found herself deviating from some of the established or expected parts of the job, largely because she didn't really see the point. For example, "I felt like it was a waste of time to sit at eight to ten shows a day — but I had heard of all of these trade shows that really only buyers went to," she says; so she asked her boss at Teen Vogue to let her go to those instead.
That allowed her to identify emerging brands that she could feature in the magazine, and "it became my passion. I found what I really loved to do was help and mentor these young talents. It was around this time that Tomasi-Hill began noticing other incongruences in the fashion system.
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