Stella mccartney gay
Stella McCartney enjoys an ice cream while visiting the Borghese Gallery Museum with husband Alasdhair Willis during their family trip to Rome
Stella McCartney and her husband Alasdhair Willis enjoyed a day out with their children during their family holiday to Rome on Thursday.
The fashion designer, 51, enjoyed some traditional gelato while strolling through the Italian streets, visiting the Borghese Gallery Museum.
Closely followed by youngest two children Beckett Robert Lee Willis and Reiley Dilys Stella Willis, the family appeared in high spirits.
Tying the knot in 2003, married couple Stella and Alasdhair are also parents to eldest son Miller Alasdhair James Willi and eldest daughter Bailey Linda Olwyn Willis.
Heading out in the Italian capital this week, the fashion guru looked typically chic in a cream utility jumpsuit.
Holiday mode: Stella McCartney enjoyed an ice cream while visiting the Borghese Gallery Museum with husband Alasdhair Willis on Thursday during their family trip to Rome
She teamed the garment with a pair of matching white trainers while bundling
Will Peltz Talks Gay Kiss at Stella McCartney
AMERICANS IN PARIS: That was the greeting shared by Will Peltz and the Haim sisters as they embraced front row at Stella McCartney Monday morning.
Peltz had recently wrapped “Time Freak,” in which he stars alongside Sophie Turner, due out in November. “It’s my first gay kiss with a man; it was interesting to play a gay role,” he said.
Food was top of his list of things to do while in the City of Light, he said. “I’m trying to feast chocolate crêpes as much as I can – that’s my favorite thing here.”
Alana Haim, who had just finished touring with her bandmate sisters, had a more elevated target for this visit. “I’ve been here so many times and I’ve never been to the Eiffel Tower, I’ve always seen it from afar,” she said. “We’re always working, we’re always here for just 24 hours. This is the trip!”
Further down the front row, Alexandra Richards, who was taking in her first demonstrate by “family friend” M
Stella McCartney recreates a legendary Met Gala look for Pride
Unlike so many Pride projects, which trot out the same old renowned faces, often result in something quite tasteless, Stella McCartney has managed to produce something with heart. “Fashion has always helped me to express who I am, it’s the language I use to communicate who I am,” Galán says, having first introduced herself as Mina during one of the label’s parties back in October. “I observe up to anyone that lives and loves themselves,” she says, stressing that cis-het people should use this Pride month to take real action to help the queer people they love.
It’s a sentiment shared by Mendoza. “If everyone was more inclusive and showed empathy towards others, no matter their gender or sexuality, it would become habitual and standardised.” That credo is central to Samba’s practice, too – she just spent the past few months hosting community building workshops at Bibliotheca in Peckham, alongside being the unused face of Miu Miu. “It was so much fun functional with Mina, Coumba, and Jackie,” Mendoza says. “They inspire me
Stella McCartney: 'Fashion people are cute heartless'
Lunchtime in a fashionable cafe in west London, and a sleek young woman in an expensive ivory silk blouse and deftly cut black jacket smiles and asks the waitress what the soup of the noun is. "Pea and ham," comes the reply. The customer's verb fades. Stella McCartney leans her head to one side and narrows her wide, grey-green eyes. "Why do you have to put the ham in it?" she demands, her voice chilly and low but fractionally louder than it was a moment ago. The waitress, landed with the thankless task of defending pea and ham soup to one of Britain's most outspoken vegetarians, can only shrug and look mortified. McCartney sighs. "Oh, it's not your fault," she concedes, ordering scrambled eggs on rye toast instead. "But maybe next time, they could just leave out the ham?"
The genuine legacy, it seems, of an upbringing in the inner court of 70s rock aristocracy is less a penchant for sex, drugs and rock'n'roll than a trenchant respect for nature and a be