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Karlie Kloss Biography
Karlie Kloss is an American model and entrepreneur known for modeling for the Victoria’s Secret Angel from 2011 until 2015, taking a two-year hiatus in 2015 and 2016 to study at New York University.
Karlie Kloss Age
She was born on 3 August 1992 in Chicago, Illinois, United States. He is 26 years old as of 2018.
Karlie Kloss Family | Karlie Kloss Sisters
She was born to Tracy (born Fares), a freelance director, and Kurt Kloss, an emergency physician. She is from a family of Danish, German and Polish roots. She has three sisters: Kariann Kloss, Kristine Kloss and Kimberly Kloss.
Karlie Kloss Husband
She began dating businessman and investor Joshua Kushner in 2012. They got engaged on 25 and married on October 18, 2018 in upstate New York.
Karlie Kloss Education
She studied at Webster Groves High School in Webster Groves, Missouri and enrolled in the Gallatin School of Individualized Study of New York University in September 2015.
Karlie Kloss Career | Karlie Kloss Agency
She posed for a cover and editorial shoot for the June issue of Scene Magazine in 2006 when she was 14 in an editorial spread titled “Almost Famous”. She also posed for the brand’s photography shot for Abercrombie kids. She sighed with NEXT Model Management in 2008 and ended up walking 31 runways in New York Fashion Week, notably closing for Marc Jacobs, opening Carolina Herrera, and occupying both spots at Doo.Ri. She walked 20 shows in Milan, and 13 in Paris for the fall 2008 collections, with 64 shows in a single season.
She then left Next Model Management in 2012 and signed with IMG Models and labeled her famed runway walk a “moody gait.” She has in advertisements for Rebecca Taylor, Nina Ricci, Chloé, Lacoste, Jean Paul Gaultier, Donna Karan,Sportmax, Dolce & Gabbana, Gap, Bally Shoe, Bergdorf Goodman, Pringle of Scotland, Dior, Alexander McQueen, Yves Saint Laurent, Elie Saab and many others.
Karlie Kloss pics, Hot, Lingerie, feetShe has walked for numerous designers in New York, Milan, London and Paris, including Shiatzy Chen, Calvin Klein, Karl Lagerfeld, Marc Jacobs, Gucci, Valentino, Zac Posen, Givenchy, Louis Vuitton, Versace, and Elie Saab.
She has appeared in editorials for American and Korean W, American Elle, Allure, French, British, Korean, German, Japanese, i-D, French and Japanese Numéro, Vanity Fair, Dazed & Confused, and American, Australian, Italian, Chinese, Turkish, Portuguese, Teen, and Latin American Vogue magazines.
She debuted on Tv appearing in season four, episode 1 of Gossip Girl as herself. In 2017, she announced her TV show, Movie Night with Karlie Kloss wich was to appear to Freeform. She was announced as Estée Lauder’s newest Global spokes mode and Brand Ambassador in October 2018. She announced hernew contact in Heidi Klum’s shoes on Project Runway’s season 17 as the host and executive producer in October 2018.
Karlie Kloss Height and Weight
Height: 6 feet 1 inch (187 cm)
Weight: 57 kilograms (125 pounds)
Breast size: 32 inches
Waist size: 23 inches
Hip size: 34 inches
Shoe size: US 9, Euro 39-40, UK 7
Body Measurements: 34-23-34
Karlie Kloss and Taylor Swift
The two are good friends, their friendship status come into question after Swift failed to attend Kloss’s wedding, the truth is, Swift was in Perth, Australia, performing at the Optus Stadium, Perth is 12 hours ahead of New York which is roughly 25 hour flight too from New York, so making Kloss’s wedding on East Coast time would have been impossible with a Swift’s show scheduled.
Karlie Kloss camp
Karlie is going to expand her coding camp for girls from 15 camps in 12 cities as per the previous years to 50 camps in 25 cities in 2019.
Karlie Kloss Workout
Click here to get her workout.
Karlie Kloss Net Worth
She has an estimated net worth is $800 million.
Karlie Kloss Gossip Girl
Karlie Kloss: Skincare Routine before Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show
Karlie Kloss Facebook
Karlie Kloss Twitter
Karlie Kloss Instagram
Karlie Kloss Victoria’s Secret Runway Walk Compilation HD
Karlie Kloss Interview
Karlie Kloss Gets Candid About Politics, Her Relationship, and Women in Tech
September 11,2018
“Do you think they can see me?” says Karlie Kloss in a whisper that registers somewhere between excitement and panic. “I just don’t want to ruin the surprise!” The six-foot-two-inch supermodel is doing her best to hide, crouching behind one of numerous bookshelves dotted around the light-filled classroom in Beaver Country Day School. It’s the first time that Kode with Klossy, her summer camp for teenage girls interested in tech, has come to the Boston area, and the fifteen or so students—“Klosstons,” as they’re calling themselves—are taking a five-minute movement break from their HTML tutorial, bopping along to “Cupid Shuffle,” the popular line-dancing anthem. They have no idea that the überfamous camp leader is literally in their midst. Pretty soon the jig is up, though: Someone has spotted Kloss’s Kelly-green Céline pants peeking through a row of textbooks. “Karlie’s here!” screams one of the girls at the top of her lungs. Pandemonium ensues. Kloss leaps to the front of the class with her hands in the air, raising her voice above the hullabaloo: “Surprise!”
Computer science doesn’t have a reputation for being this much fun, especially not among high school girls, but Kloss is hoping to change that. Over the course of just four summers, her camp has grown from an intimate classroom of 20 in New York to a nationwide program offering scholarships to 1,000 young women across 25 cities. According to the National Center for Women & Information Technology, women account for only 18 percent of computer and information-science graduates and are largely underrepresented in Silicon Valley as a result, making up about 30 percent of workers in the tech industry as a whole. Plus, there is troubling evidence to suggest that the gender gap is only widening: A report published by the NCWIT in 2016 found that the number of women in computing has in fact been in steady decline since the early 1990s, with a quit rate more than double that of men—41 percent compared with 17 percent. And that makes initiatives like this more important than ever. “The gender gap within tech is a persistent problem that we won’t solve without all of us championing the cause and actively working toward more representation,” says Susan Wojcicki, who since joining YouTube as CEO in 2014 has helped raise the percentage of women working at the company from 24 to 30 percent. That sentiment is echoed by Reshma Saujani, a lawyer and the former deputy public advocate for New York City, whose nonprofit organization Girls Who Code paved the way for initiatives like Kloss’s. Since launching in NYC in 2012, Girls Who Code has reached 90,000 students in 50 states with summer-camp programs and after-school clubs starting in third grade. Saujani believes that exposing young women to a broader spectrum of female role models will play a key role in closing the gap. “This one-dimensional image of what a coder looks like has got to end, and pop culture can help with that,” says Saujani. “Look at what someone like Shonda Rhimes did for medicine and law. We forget that women made up only 10 percent of lawyers in the 1970s.”
Source: vogue.com