30 photos bear witness the unglamorous side of New York Fashion Week

model sleeping

A model takes an opportunity to nap.
Neilson Barnard/Getty Images
  • New York Mode week is boot off mid-February.
  • This year, NYFW volition livestream track shows, panels, and movies — just information technology's not all glamorous.
  • Behind the scenes, models get blisters, fight exhaustion, and attempt not to fall.
  • Visit Insider's homepage for more stories.

As the press works tirelessly to brand sure New York Mode Week looks as glamorous equally possible, behind the scenes, information technology's not always as elegant as information technology appears.

Wintertime NYFW, which runs through the heart of February, is especially hard because of freezing temperatures. Attendees have to boxing the infamous New York current of air, oftentimes waiting in long lines simply to nourish a fifteen-minute show. This twelvemonth, NYFW volition be live- streaming rails shows and panels, saving many attendees from having to brave the common cold. Merely running Fashion Week in the middle of a pandemic offers a new set of unglamorous challenges.

From broken heels and blisters to freezing rain and tons of diva moments, these photos reveal the unglamorous side of New York Fashion Week.

Being a model isn't always glamorous. New York Style Calendar week ordinarily means early call times and hours spent in a chair with people pulling at your hair.

A sleepy model gets her hair washed.
Michael Stewart/WireImage

Models take to sit through the hair pulling with no complaints.

A model winces as her hair is pulled.
Paul Morigi/WireImage/Getty Images

The pain continues on the runway, as some models end up with blisters from those sky-high shoes.

A model's Band-Aids are seen during a show.
AP Photo/Julie Jacobson

Trying not to autumn is a whole different dilemma.

A model tumbles down a set of stairs on a rail phase.
Frazer Harrison/Getty Images

Stairs proved to exist quite tricky for models at the Givenchy Spring 2016 show.

Another model takes a fall and has to be helped up by audience members.
Frazer Harrison/Getty Images

A wipe-out tin not but interfere with the flow of a testify, but models can get seriously injured.

A model slips while walking in the Herve Leger by Max Azria show.
Scott Gries/Getty Images for IMG

But falling can likewise humanize the style world a flake.

A model smiles off her fall and gets dorsum on her feet.
STAN HONDA/AFP/Getty Images

Once the show begins, designers can only hope that everything unfolds equally planned. Diane Von Furstenberg could exercise zero but watch as a light rig fell and landed near audience members in 2005.

This show was held in Bryant Park, which fabricated the set design more difficult than usual.
Thos Robinson/Getty Images

Backstage can also get tense in the minutes leading upwardly to the show — usually with designers and production barking orders.

Designer Kimora Lee Simmons yells backstage minutes earlier her bear witness.
Bryan Bedder/Getty Images For IMG

Even models as experienced as Gigi Hadid tin get flustered before walking.

Gigi Hadid.
RW/MediaPunch/IPX/AP Images

Kids tin't ever keep their cool, either. Here, North Westward has a modest tantrum while sitting forepart row with her mom at the Alexander Wang show.

Kim tries to distract Northward with candy, which is probably a rare find during Fashion Week.
Craig Barritt/Getty Images

To ease the stress of it all, some audience members bring their dogs to the show.

Designer Scott Studenberg brings his puppy to have in all the latest trends.
Monica Schipper/Getty Images for NYFW: The Shows

Some dogs get more access than attendees.

Attending the clothes rehearsal.
Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images for New York Mode Week: The Shows

This dog got the chance to watch a wearing apparel rehearsal before attendees were let in.

In the past, photographers accept oft been cramped together, with some fifty-fifty spending hours sitting on the floor just to get the perfect shot.

Attending a testify is worth it, even if it means having to sit on the floor.
Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images For Michael Kors

They dressed in their all-time, simply attendees at previous years' shows had to wait in long lines before they even took their seats.

Luckily, this line is inside.
Manny Carabel/Getty Images

Mode Week is held in the summer and winter so attendees take to either wait in the thick heat, or the icy New York wind.

Attendees try not to sweat through their glamorous outfits.
Roy Rochlin/Roy Rochlin/Getty Images

In one case it starts to snow or sleet, getting to and from shows can become a nightmare.

A man shovels the stairs in front of a way show.
Baton FARRELL/Patrick McMullan/Getty Images

Once attendees have their seats, they have to expect even longer earlier the testify comes on.

Shows usually but concluding about 15 minutes.
Bryan Bedder/Getty Images for IMG

Source: Harper's Boutique

Then one time the evidence ends, information technology is a mad dash for the leave, as attendees need to make it to their side by side scheduled outcome.

Everyone snaps one terminal photo and and then books it out of at that place.
Albert Urso/Getty Images for NYFW: The Shows

Backstage, makeup products are crammed into the express infinite.

Drugstore makeup brands are a lot more common than y'all would think.
Ben Gabbe/Getty Images

When models aren't existence made up, they normally but laissez passer the time by sleeping in any corner they can detect.

It's not uncommon to see a model lying on a floor.
Neilson Barnard/Getty Images

It is becoming more common for shows to be held in obscure locations, including parks and subway stops. This means unglamorous, mobile bathrooms.

The bathrooms for a way prove in Bryant Park.
Thos Robinson/Getty Images

Attendees probably didn't program on having to duck into a small stall wearing a couture outfit.

A bathroom attendant helps a way-goer into a stall.
Thos Robinson/Getty Images

In the past, elevators have been jam-packed with models and designers rushing to the green rooms.

Christian Siriano, left, packs an elevator with models ahead of the presentation of his spring line.
AP Photograph/Kevin Hagen

Streets outside the shows were only as crowded, as paparazzi raced through the city trying to capture photos of celebrities.

Paparazzi even capture every twenty-four hour period people.
Andrew Lichtenstein/Corbis via Getty Images

Fashion Week has even turned the streets of New York into a crowded runway — New Yorkers could forget getting to work on fourth dimension.

Taking over the streets.
Andrew Lichtenstein/Corbis/Getty Images

At that place'south truly no escape from the printing. The Yeohlee bear witness was held at a subway stop, making the commute impossible for locals.

Press cake an exit at a New York subway finish.
Scott Gries/Getty Images

Wintertime doesn't cease the madness. Photographers have to bundle upward and brave the cold to go the perfect shot.

Current of air and snowfall won't end the paparazzi.
AP Photo/Diane Bondareff

In 2020, New York Fashion Week looked a niggling dissimilar as local designers and models had to follow COVID-19 regulations to go along the event safe.

Models in masks can add a whole new level of difficulty for hair and makeup artists.
ANGELA WEISS/AFP via Getty Images
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