Photography: Kapture Studio @studiokapture
Styling: Maria Jose Salazar @mariajose_salazarbl
Makeup: Roxana @makeupr0x
Hair Styling: Lorenzo Badalacchi @badawigs
Set Design: @devorahgoldd
Video: Anastasia Puzyrnaya @anastaspu
Pr: Davis NYCFE @davisnycfe
Model: Anne Dias @annefdias from @models.iconic
Fashion has long flirted with transformation, but in this story photographed by Kapture Studio, transformation becomes the narrative itself. Brazilian model Anne Dias moves through a sequence of personas that feel less like costume changes and more like chapters of a modern fairy tale. Against the exposed elegance of studio back drops and suspended fabrics, each frame reveals the beauty of construction, where fantasy and craftsmanship exist side by side. The result feels refreshingly honest, inviting the viewer behind the curtain while never diminishing the magic.
Maria Jose Salazar’s styling embraces the language of contemporary couture with re markable ease. A sculptural metallic bloom evokes the grandeur of Carolina Herrera, while fluid silhouettes from Gabriela Hearst and Anne Fontaine introduce moments of restraint and sophistication. Elsewhere, the theatrical volume and playful propor tions associated with Kika Vargas emerge with confidence, creating looks that com mand attention without overwhelming the woman who wears them. Every garment appears chosen not merely for its beauty but for the character it helps create.
Beauty becomes an equally important storyteller. Lorenzo Badalacchi’s hair work shifts effortlessly between romantic waves and sharply graphic shapes, transforming Anne from ethereal muse to avant-garde heroine. Roxana’s makeup complements the evolution with a painterly touch, emphasizing flushed skin, soft-focus eyes, and rich, cinematic tones. Together they create a visual dialogue between vulnerability and performance, allowing each portrait to feel intimate despite its editorial scale.
What lingers most is the sense of possibility. Designs from Andrea Landa, La Petite Mort and Dolce & Gabbana contribute layers of texture, drama and seduction, yet the collection never settles into a single mood. Instead, Anne Dias inhabits a series of imagined lives, each more compelling than the last. The story ultimately suggests that style is at its most powerful when it becomes an act of transformation, allowing a woman to move effortlessly between reality and fantasy while remaining entirely herself.