10 Secrets About Victoria’s Secret & The Victoria’s Secret Models That Most Women Wish They Knew

“Be kind, forgive, love with all your heart… and in everything you set out to do, find the beauty and the joy.”

Victoria’s Secret #1

Very few people know this but the founder of Victoria’s Secret committed suicide by jumping off the Golden Gate bridge in the San Francisco Bay Area after he realized that he had made the greatest business mistake of his life in the early 1980’s. It turns out that he had sold Victoria’s Secret to entrepreneur Leslie Wexner (founder of the Limited) for $4 million without realizing that Victoria’s Secret would be worth $500 million just a few years later. Today, Victoria’s Secret is the #1 lingerie company in the world and is worth approximately $12 billion United States dollars.

Victoria’s Secret #2

The Victoria’s Secret Angels are not really represented by Victoria’s Secret. These supermodels are represented by their prestigious modeling agencies, and Victoria’s Secret needs the permission of each of those modeling agencies prior to booking each Victoria’s Secret model.

Victoria’s Secret #3

The Victoria’s Secret Angels are no ordinary fashion models in terms of earnings power. Most people would be shocked to find out that Victoria’s Secret Angels make more money in one day than what many men and women make in one year working full time in a regular 9 AM to 5 PM office job. For example, Victoria’s Secret supermodel Gisele Bundchen made approximately $128,000 United States dollars per day (according to Forbes magazine) by modeling for many of the world’s most prestigious fashion brands.

Victoria’s Secret #4

The Victoria’s Secret Angels have a global reach that supermodels from the 1990’s could only dream about. While it is true that supermodels from the 1980’s and 1990’s such as Claudia Schiffer, Cindy Crawford, and Linda Evangelista where known around the world, they were not able to reach their fans directly on a global scale. Today, Victoria’s Secret supermodels such as Adriana Lima, Alessandra Ambrosio, and South African supermodel Candice Swanepoel can reach their tens of millions of fans directly through social media channels such as Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter.

Basically, this is an advertiser’s dream because these advertisers know that they can reach tens of millions of people directly by simply hiring these extremely beautiful Victoria’s Secret supermodels, and asking these Victoria’s Secret models to mention their brands in their social media channels. Thus, this allows these Victoria’s Secret fashion models to earn millions of dollars because of their incredible brand power and global reach through their fans that follow them around the world and most importantly, that listen to everything that these Victoria’s Secret models have to say about these brands.

Victoria’s Secret #5

Simply by looking at the Victoria’s Secret Angels you might think that they should enjoy every single day because once they start having children everything would go downhill from there and only get worse with age. However, what most people fail to realize is that many of today’s Victoria’s Secret supermodels are moms and have not just one child, but multiple children. The truth is that to reach the highest level of fashion modeling, you need dedication and consistency. These Victoria’s Secret Angels became supermodels by taking care of their mind and bodies, and to them having children is no excuse to stop working out, start eating hamburgers with bacon and other junk food, and just getting lazy.

If anything, these Victoria’s Secret Angels start working even harder once they have children (what better motivation than giving birth to your child and knowing that in exactly six weeks the entire world will be seeing you walking the runway in lingerie on national television). It used to be that many people would say a model’s career was over once she hit 30 years of age, but many of today’s Victoria’s Secret supermodels are well into their 30’s and making more money than ever before (this has to do a lot with the fact that they have been around longer and have had more time to gather a larger following around the world thanks to social media). Thus, whereas 20 or 30 years ago an advertiser would have been more cautious about hiring a model in her 30’s or 40’s, it now becomes less of an issue if the 30 or 40 year old model has over 11 million followers just on Instagram alone as is the case with Victoria’s Secret supermodel Adriana Lima.

Victoria’s Secret #6

Victoria’s Secret models are not exactly starving, and by that we mean that Victoria’s Secret models are making so much money that being able to pay the bills is the least of their problems. However, by using that phrase we also mean that unlike many other fashion models, Victoria’s Secret models can be a little more curvy than usual for fashion models. In fact, many Victoria’s Secret models share their eating habits to their millions of fans around the world, and while they do eat extremely healthy and take care of their beautiful and perfect bodies on a daily basis, they do like to reward themselves from time to time for all of their hard work modeling, specially after modeling for a successful fashion show, such as the Victoria’s Secret fashion show each year.

The reason that many Victoria’s Secret models do eat a lot is also because they also work out a lot in the gym. During interviews, many Victoria’s Secret models have mentioned that if they did not eat a lot, they would simply not have enough energy for all of those intense workouts that they do at the gym with their trainers. As they have mentioned many times, the problem arises when you eat a lot, and for one reason or another, you simply stop working out on a daily basis. That is when you start gaining weight (most successful fashion models weigh less than 135 pounds, and while this may seem like a lot to some women, it is important to note that many of these successful fashion models are 5’10 or 5’11 in height).

Victoria’s Secret #7

The Victoria’s Secret models travel the world, and by travel the world we really mean travel the world. The Victoria’s Secret models get to travel to some of the most beautiful and exotic destinations in the world, and along the way get to meet some of the most interesting people in the world (we are taking kings, royalty, famous athletes, movie stars, and billionaires that own the companies that hire them for their advertising campaigns). Thus, while this should not be the reason why someone should get into fashion modeling, it is nice to be able to say that you have visited half of the countries in the world while staying at 5 star luxury hotels.

Victoria’s Secret #8

Many Victoria’s Secret Angels had a hard time getting dates in high school. This has to do with the fact that many Victoria’s Secret models developed their bodies late, or developed their bodies too fast and were too tall and skinny. Just like the fairy tales, something magical happened to many of them that by the time they finished high school and entered adulthood, finding dates would become the least of their worries.

Victoria’s Secret #9

Most people already know that L Brands (parent company and owner of Victoria’s Secret) not only owns the Victoria’s Secret brand and the Victoria’s Secret PINK brand, but that they also own Bath & Body Works, La Senza (lingerie), and Henri Bendel. However, what many people do not know is that Abercrombie & Fitch, Express, Lane Bryant, Lerner New York (which later became New York & Company), The Limited, The Limited Too, Structure (converted to Express Men, brand name later sold to Sears), Aura Science (merged with Victoria’s Secret Beauty), and Galyan’s (merged with Dick’s Sporting Goods). Even more impressive, is that the parent company of Victoria’s Secret had the foresight and vision to sell these businesses at great prices before many of them started deteriorating due to the arrival of the Internet and the Amazon.com effect (why go to a fashion store at the mall when you can purchase the same item on Amazon.com for much less money).

Victoria’s Secret #10

The greatest of all secrets coming after this year’s Victoria’s Secret fashion show…

How Supermodel Candice Swanepoel Got Discovered | How Famous Fashion Model Candice Swanepoel Started Her Fashion Modeling Career

By now, you’re probably used to seeing all your favorite supermodels on the runways and in the season’s hottest fashion modeling campaigns, but you probably don’t know how they each first got their fashion modeling start. From the most iconic supermodels of the 1990’s to today’s fashion runway modeling stars, we take a look back at the model discovery stories that launched some of fashion’s greatest modeling careers.

How Supermodel Candice Swanepoel Got Discovered | How Famous Fashion Model Candice Swanepoel Started Her Fashion Modeling Career

The South African bombshell was unexpectedly discovered as a teenager while shopping at a flea market in South Africa. By the time she was 16, she was already modeling in Paris, France. Along with being named a Victoria’s Secret Angel in 2010 and modeling for Victoria’s Secret for many years, supermodel Candice Swanepoel has walked the fashion runway for several major fashion designers including Fendi, Dolce & Gabbana, Michael Kors, and Chanel. In 2018, South African supermodel Candice Swanepoel launched her own swimwear line, Tropic of C.

About ZARZAR MODELS

ZARZAR MODELS is one of the top modeling agencies for women in the United States representing models in print fashion editorials, high fashion runway, film, television commercials, and promotions. The agency represents top models in all of the major fashion cities and counties including Los Angeles, Beverly Hills, Hollywood, Orange County Southern California, San Diego, San Francisco, Las Vegas, Phoenix, Miami, New York, London, Paris, Milan, Sao Paulo, and Tokyo and recruits and represents models throughout the world through its global fashion and modeling network.

http://www.zarzarmodels.com

Fashion Modeling In Berlin Germany & Modeling In New York City | My Fabulous Life As A Famous New York City Fashion Model | Modeling For Victoria’s Secret & New York Fashion Week

Above: Fashion Modeling In Berlin Germany & Modeling In New York City | My Fabulous Life As A Famous New York City Fashion Model | Modeling For Victoria’s Secret & New York Fashion Week.

Above: Fashion Modeling In Berlin Germany & Modeling In New York City | My Fabulous Life As A Famous New York City Fashion Model | Modeling For Victoria’s Secret & New York Fashion Week.

The Tragic Story Of Victoria’s Secret & Why Victoria’s Secret Founder Roy Raymond Jumped From The Golden Gate Bridge Ending His Life



The Tragic Story Of Victoria’s Secret & Why Victoria’s Secret Founder Roy Raymond Jumped From The Golden Gate Bridge Ending His Life.

The Story Of Victoria’s Secret & Why Victoria’s Secret Founder Roy Raymond Jumped From The Golden Gate Bridge Ending His Life

ZARZAR MODELS is one of the top modeling agencies for women in the United States representing models in print fashion editorials, high fashion runway, film, television commercials, and promotions. The agency represents top models in all of the major fashion cities and counties including Los Angeles, Beverly Hills, Hollywood, Orange County Southern California, San Diego, San Francisco, Las Vegas, Phoenix, Miami, New York, London, Paris, Milan, Sao Paulo, and Tokyo and recruits and represents models throughout the world through its global fashion and modeling network.

The Versace Tribute Collection – Spring Summer

Above: The Versace Tribute Collection – Spring Summer 2018.

“This collection is a Tribute to the life and works of Gianni. We pay homage to not only his artistic genius but to who he was as a man, and above all, as my brother. Gianni was an exceptional person for how he celebrated each day as though it were extraordinary and for how he always approached life with a smile on his lips. Each year Gianni lived, he lived to its fullest: throughout his career, he created collections that to this day are considered a cultural point of reference and inspiration to many. It would be impossible to commemorate Gianni’s entire world in a single collection, therefore, I have decided to honor his legacy with his beloved prints and dazzling metal mesh. This collection is for you, Gianni.” Donatella Versace

Gianni Versace (December 2, 1946 – July 15, 1997) was an Italian fashion designer and founder of Versace, an international fashion house, which produces accessories, fragrances, makeup, home furnishings, and most importantly, clothes for women. Gianni Versace also designed costumes for the theater and films. As a friend of Eric Clapton, Diana (Princess of Wales), fashion model Naomi Campbell, Duran Duran, Madonna, Elton John, Cher, Sting, and many other famous celebrities, Gianni Versace was one of the first designers to link fashion to the music world. Versace was murdered outside his Miami Beach home at the age of 50.

“Supermodels Candice Swanepoel, Caroline Trentini, Doutzen Kroes, Anja Rubik, Natasha Poly, and a few of the legendary supermodels from the 1990’s such as Cindy Crawford and Claudia Schiffer made this an incredibly beautiful fashion show. In fact, these models ruled the fashion runway during this beautiful fashion show in memory of Gianni Versace.”

ZARZAR MODELS is one of the top modeling agencies for women in the United States representing models in print fashion editorials, high fashion runway, film, television commercials, and promotions. The agency represents top models in all of the major fashion cities and counties including Los Angeles, Beverly Hills, Hollywood, Orange County Southern California, San Diego, San Francisco, Las Vegas, Phoenix, Miami, New York, London, Paris, Milan, Sao Paulo, and Tokyo and recruits and represents models throughout the world through its global fashion and modeling network.

http://www.zarzarmodels.com

The Story Of Victoria’s Secret & Why Victoria’s Secret Founder Roy Raymond Jumped From The Golden Gate Bridge Ending His Life

"I dream of becoming a ZARZAR MODEL and modeling for Victoria’s Secret. It’s all I’ve ever wanted. It’s the only thing that matters."
“I dream of becoming a ZARZAR MODEL and modeling for Victoria’s Secret. It’s all I’ve ever wanted. It’s the only thing that matters.”

“I dream of becoming a ZARZAR MODEL and modeling for Victoria’s Secret. It’s all I’ve ever wanted. It’s the only thing that matters.”

“A Stanford MBA named Roy Raymond wants to buy his wife some lingerie but he’s too embarrassed to shop for it at a department store. He comes up with an idea for a high-end place that doesn’t make you feel like a pervert. He gets a $40,000 bank loan, borrows another $40,000 from his in-laws, opens a store, and calls it Victoria’s Secret. Makes $500,000 his first year. He starts a catalog, opens three more stores, and after five years he sells the company to Leslie Wexner and The Limited for $4 million. Happy ending, right? Except two years later, the company’s worth $500 million and Roy Raymond jumps off the Golden Gate Bridge. Poor guy just wanted to buy his wife a pair of thigh-highs.”

—Sean Parker (Justin Timberlake) to Mark Zuckerberg (Jesse Eisenberg) in the movie The Social Network (2010). Today, L Brands (the parent company and owner of Victoria’s Secret) is worth approximately $12 billion United States dollars and is the #1 lingerie company in the world.

In the mid-1970’s, Roy Raymond did indeed walk into a department store to buy his wife lingerie, only to find ugly looking lingerie made even uglier under harsh fluorescent lights and saleswomen who made him feel like a pervert just for being inside the store. Realizing that other male friends felt the same way, the 30 year old man saw an opportunity to create a market where none existed: a lingerie store designed to make men feel comfortable shopping sexy lingerie (bras, panties, and nightgowns) for women.

Roy Raymond imagined a Victorian boudoir (a woman’s bedroom or private sitting room) and chose the name “Victoria” to evoke the propriety and respectability associated with the Victorian era (Roy Raymond imagined a beautiful lingerie store where Victoria’s “secrets” would be hidden for men and women to discover). In 1977, with $80,000 of savings and loans, Roy Raymond and his wife leased a space in a small shopping mall in Palo Alto, northern California (in the heart of Silicon Valley), and Victoria’s Secret was born.

“I dream of becoming a ZARZAR MODEL and modeling for Victoria’s Secret. It’s all I’ve ever wanted. It’s the only thing that matters.”



To understand how novel Roy Raymond’s idea was at the time, it helps to have a little context about the women’s lingerie industry before Victoria’s Secret came into existence. In the 1950’s and 1960’s, women’s lingerie was all about practicality, comfort, and durability. For most American women, sensual and sexy lingerie was reserved for the honeymoon or the anniversary night (Frederick’s of Hollywood was the leading lingerie retailer during those decades). When the women’s movement of the late 1960’s and 1970’s called for women to liberate themselves from the ugly looking bras that were found at most retailers, the intimate apparel industry responded with new designs that they claimed would give women the natural look they desired. Unfortunately, very little changed and for the most part, bras remained functional, not sexy.

Victoria’s Secret changed all that, and in the San Francisco Bay Area, its sales continued to grow extremely fast thanks in large part to its sexy lingerie catalog, which reached customers across the United States. Within five years, Roy Raymond had opened three more Victoria’s Secret stores in the San Francisco Bay Area. By 1982, Victoria’s Secret had annual sales of more than $4 million dollars, yet something in Roy Raymond’s formula was not working properly. According to industry experts, Victoria’s Secret was nearing bankruptcy.

Enter Leslie Wexner, the man who had taken advantage of the phenomenal growth of sportswear for women with a store he called The Limited. While still in his 20s, Leslie Wexner had recognized that women were forgoing dresses for separates and casual wear, so in 1963, he decided to open a store “limited” just to sportswear. Leslie Wexner’s ability to foresee the future paid off big time, and by 1970 The Limited had grown to 11 stores, and an impressive 188 stores by 1977 (according to industry experts). Leslie Wexner, now 40 years old and worth approximately $50 million dollars, was on his way to becoming extremely wealthy and a multi-billionaire.

The Untold Truth Of Victoria’s Secret

“I dream of becoming a ZARZAR MODEL and modeling for Victoria’s Secret. It’s all I’ve ever wanted. It’s the only thing that matters.”



By the early 1980s, Leslie Wexner was looking to branch out into new fashion brands, and while visiting one of his The Limited fashion stores in San Francisco, he stumbled across a Victoria’s Secret lingerie store. The Victoria’s Secret lingerie store was a small store, and it was Victorian, but the problem was that it was not English Victorian, but brothel Victorian with red velvet sofas. However, what truly caught Leslie Wexner’s attention was the fact that the Victoria’s Secret store had very sexy lingerie, and that he had not seen anything like it in the United States. Making things more complicated was the fact that despite elegant bras, panties, and sexy lingerie, the models modeling for the Victoria’s Secret lingerie catalog looked like high end call girls.

Leslie Wexner quickly realized what was wrong with the Victoria’s Secret business model: by focusing on a lingerie store and catalog that appealed mostly to men, Roy Raymond had failed to draw a large following among women. Thus, it is believed that Leslie Wexner assumed that women were just as uncomfortable walking into a Victoria’s Secret store as Roy Raymond had been in that flourescent-lit department store.

Nevertheless, Leslie Wexner saw the lingerie company’s potential, and in 1982, he purchased the stores and the catalog for about $1 million dollars (not $4 million dollars, as was reported at the time and as quoted in the movie The Social Network). This was probably the deal of a lifetime, and Leslie Wexner’s first step (according to Victoria’s Secret historians) was to study European lingerie boutiques, whose female customers approached lingerie as an everyday essential. Thus, it is believed that after carefully studying other lingerie stores in Europe, Leslie Wexner returned home convinced that if American women had access to the same kind of sexy, affordable lingerie as their European counterparts, they too would also want to wear sexy lingerie every single day.

Leslie Wexner also saw a huge opportunity in the intimate apparel market in that there were almost no lingerie products that filled the gap between luxury brands such as La Perla and cheap lingerie brands that you could find at most department stores. Thus, Leslie Wexner envisioned a La Perla for the mass market, and realized that this new sexy shopping environment (one that was inviting to women and fulfilled an attainable fantasy of sexy glamour, beauty, and luxury) would help to create greater demand for lingerie in the United States, and eventually, the rest of the world.

Leslie Wexner ultimately decided to create for Victoria’s Secret what Ralph Lauren had mastered the decade before him: a British inspired world of pure beauty and affordable luxury that American women would love. Gone were the dark woods and deep reds of the original Victoria’s Secret stores. Women would now enter a Victoria’s Secret lingerie store and find beautiful music, perfume bottles, and most importantly, incredibly sexy bras and panties hanging neatly under inviting lights.

The Victoria’s Secret lingerie catalog, which had become modern and racy under the leadership of its previous owner (founder Roy Raymond), was softened to reflect the new image that Leslie Wexner wanted to project for Victoria’s Secret. This new image for Victoria’s Secret involved beautiful fashion models who looked like they had just walked off the pages of Vogue magazine. Eventually, as the 1990s arrived, a new generation of extremely famous fashion models arrived on the scene that would take Victoria’s Secret to a level no one could have possibly foreseen in the 1970s (these fashion models were extremely beautiful and so famous that people knew who you were referring to by simply saying their first names).

The changes made by Leslie Wexner changed the perception that women had about Victoria’s Secret, and soon women started buying sexy bras, panties, and lingerie at the newly renovated Victoria’s Secret stores while men continued dreaming about the incredibly beautiful lingerie models that were found inside the Victoria’s Secret catalogs. By 1996 Leslie Wexner’s plan was working to almost perfection, and Victoria’s Secret decided that it was time for them to have their very first fashion show (by that time they were already doing approximately $2 billion United States dollars in annual sales with hundreds of Victoria’s Secret stores nationwide).

The first Victoria’s Secret fashion show introduced by supermodel Stephanie Seymour was held at the Plaza Hotel in New York City in August 1996 (the first three Victoria’s Secret fashion shows in the 1990s were held in the days preceding Valentine’s Day to promote the Victoria’s Secret brand and were not aired on national television). In 1999 Victoria’s Secret decided that it was time to take the Victoria’s Secret brand and the Victoria’s Secret fashion show to the next level and enabled millions of people to view the entire Victoria’s Secret fashion show on the Internet for the very first time. That year, during Super Bowl XXXIII, Victoria’s Secret announced a 72 hour countdown to the Internet webcast of the very first Victoria’s Secret fashion show, which eventually resulted in over 2 million Internet viewers of the fashion show. Victoria’s Secret parent company Intimate Brands (which was owned by Leslie Wexner’s The Limited) bought a $1.5 million 30 second television advertisement (which is a lot more money in today’s dollars) during the Super Bowl broadcast and spent an additional $4 million for subsequent international newspaper advertisements to publicize the huge fashion event.

The 1999 Victoria’s Secret fashion show, which was aired by Broadcast.com (founded by Mark Cuban which he eventually sold to Yahoo! for $5.7 billion), featured many of the most famous supermodels of the 1990s including Tyra Banks (she would eventually become host of America’s Next Top Model in the 2000s), French supermodel Laetitia Casta, German beauty Heidi Klum (she would eventually become host of Project Runway in the 2000s), Karen Mulder, Daniela Pestova, Inés Rivero, and legendary supermodel Stephanie Seymour. The next year, the 2000 Victoria’s Secret fashion show was moved from the usual February event at the Plaza Hotel in New York City to a May event in concert with the Cannes Film Festival in France to raise money for the Cinema Against AIDS charity which raised approximately $3.5 million dollars (what better than extreme beauty being used to make the world a better place).

In the year 2001 the Victoria’s Secret fashion show was moved ahead of the Christmas holiday season for the very first time. Most importantly, that year the Victoria’s Secret fashion show made its network television broadcast debut on ABC television, though in subsequent years it has been broadcast on CBS television. The Victoria’s Secret fashion show has been held at a variety of beautiful locations in different cities including Miami, Los Angeles, Cannes (Paris), London, and Shanghai (China) during the 2017 holiday Christmas season. The first four Victoria’s Secret fashion shows were held at the Plaza Hotel in New York City, but since it has become a televised event it has most often been held at the 69th Regiment Armory in New York City. As Victoria’s Secret continued to refine and tweak the company image (they abandoned the English boudoir theme around the year 2000), Victoria’s Secret eventually became the most popular lingerie brand in the world, with annual revenues expected to reach $20 billion United States dollars by the year 2020.

Sadly, as Leslie Wexner and Victoria’s Secret became more successful with each passing year, Roy Raymond (the founder of Victoria’s Secret) saw his life tragically fall apart. After selling Victoria’s Secret to Leslie Wexner for only $1 million dollars (this was the deal of the century as previously explained), Roy Raymond stayed on as president of Victoria’s Secret for about another year before leaving the company to open My Child’s Destiny, a high-end children’s retail and catalog company based in San Francisco. But, according to a New York Times article at the time, a poor marketing strategy (focused too much on attracting only well-off parents) and an even poorer location (little walk-in traffic) forced them to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection two years later in 1986. The Raymonds ended up divorcing, and in 1993, Roy Raymond jumped to his death from the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, leaving behind two teenage children.

“I dream of becoming a ZARZAR MODEL and modeling for Victoria’s Secret. It’s all I’ve ever wanted. It’s the only thing that matters.”



ZARZAR MODELS is one of the top modeling agencies for women in the United States representing models in print fashion editorials, high fashion runway, film, television commercials, and promotions. The agency represents top models in all of the major fashion cities and counties including Los Angeles, Beverly Hills, Hollywood, Orange County Southern California, San Diego, San Francisco, Las Vegas, Phoenix, Miami, New York, London, Paris, Milan, Sao Paulo, and Tokyo and recruits and represents models throughout the world through its global fashion and modeling network.

http://www.zarzarmodels.com

How Much Money Do Fashion Models Earn Modeling Per Day? | How Much Money Do Fashion Models Make Or Get Paid Modeling Per Day In New York City, Los Angeles, & Other Fashion Capitals Including Paris, London, & Milan Italy?

How Much Money Do Fashion Models Earn Modeling Per Day In Los Angeles & New York City?
How Much Money Do Fashion Models Earn Modeling Per Day In Los Angeles & New York City?

Above: How Much Money Do Fashion Models Earn Modeling Per Day In Los Angeles & New York City?

Many people often wonder how much models really earn or make per day for each modeling assignment, specially young models considering a career in high fashion modeling. In an effort to educate the public and those that are considering entering the modeling industry as high fashion models, editorial models, and runway models ZARZAR MODELING AGENCY known throughout the world as simply ZARZAR MODELS has created this informative article for those that are simply just wondering…

How Much Money Do Models Really Earn Or Make Per Day?

Let us start with New York City, the fashion capital of the United States of America:

The rates are highest in New York City where it is not unusual for a model to make $5,000 to $6,000 for an 8 hour day. That comes out to $750 per hour in United States Dollars. Now add the dollar amount earned for high fashion modeling to the prestige, glamour, and excitement of doing high fashion campaigns for Gucci, Prada, and Ralph Lauren and the rewards are priceless. Also, many top models charge a minimum daily rate which means that if a client finishes early, the model is free to leave and actually earns more than $750 per hour! Thus, real modeling rates are more like $1,000.00 per hour for many New York models.

In most other markets within the United States such as Los Angeles and Miami the day rates for modeling are more like $1,500 to $2,000 per day. That comes out to $250 per hour in United States Dollars. However, even in these markets if a client is extremely interested in a model they will pay the higher New York City modeling rates. Thus, it is very common for a ZARZAR MODEL based in Beverly Hills or Los Angeles to earn over $2,000.00 per day at a minimum, and even ZARZAR MODELS based in San Diego, Southern California (where the fashion market is not as strong as Los Angeles and New York) can easily command modeling rates upward of $1,100.00 per day.

In most other markets not mentioned above the hourly rate can be around $150 United States Dollars and usually with some minimum amount of hours, such as a 4 hour minimum (half a day rate) as determined by the model’s agency. For example, if a client wishes to book a ZARZAR MODEL the minimum rate will be the half day rate even if they need the model for only 2 or 3 hours in order to protect the model’s earning power (this is because a 2 hour booking at noon can prevent a model from earning the full day rate somewhere else with a different fashion client). These rates are for what is called “print modeling” which includes magazine advertisements, catalogs, and brochures.