Glow Diet: Nourish Your Body and Make Your Skin Glow from Within
Food is an essential part of our health and well-being. That’s why it’s so important to pay attention to what we eat—our physical and emotional state often mirrors our diet. In this context, the concept of the “glow diet” emerges. While not an official diet plan, it promotes a way of eating that enhances health from the inside out, giving our skin a natural radiance that speaks for itself.
This style of eating is centered on nutrient-rich foods, especially antioxidants, which protect cells from external damage caused by UV rays, stress, and environmental factors. Some of the most recommended options include tomatoes, spinach, carrots, raspberries, blueberries, red bell peppers, strawberries, grapes, pomegranate, broccoli, seeds, nuts, and dark chocolate with at least 70% cocoa.
Fattú Djakité: The Artist Who Turns Ancestry Into Anthem
When Fattú Djakité steps onstage, the air changes. Turbans knotted like crowns, braids mapping lineage, a gaze that carries tenderness and resolve—she doesn’t just perform; she officiates. Across music and visual art, Fattú builds worlds where tradition breathes through modern form, and beauty is never decorative—it’s directive. Her canvases echo the cadences of her songs: abstract, textural, rooted in African memory yet electrified by the present. She is Afro-Atlantic in pulse, cinematic in composition, and adamant that art must do more than impress. It must speak, protect, and transform.
Jasper Soloff on Color, Identity, and the Politics of Visibility
At just twenty-seven, New York–based photographer and director Jasper Soloff has carved out a place at the cutting edge of contemporary culture. His work—an electrifying explosion of bold colors, kinetic movement, and raw authenticity—has defined campaigns for some of the most recognizable names in entertainment: Gigi Hadid, Billy Porter, Bretman Rock, Tinashe, Billie Eilish, and Emma Chamberlain. Now, as the face of Canon’s EOS R8 campaign, Jasper steps out from behind the camera, reflecting on his creative process and the politics embedded in his art.

