
Celebrate Pride Month 2025 with these eye-catching nail art ideas
These days nail art has become somewhat of a fashion statement, which also makes the medium a fun, personal place to show your support for the LGBTQIA+ community. From sleek French tips dipped in rainbow hues to flag inspired ombrés, there's a nail art design for every mood and outfit. Want a little drama? Take your neutral manicure up a notch with holographic sparkles and let your nails do all the talking.
Whether you're part of the LGBTQIA+ community or an ally, get ready to make a statement and champion the rights of the community this Pride month, all while wearing your heart on your fingertips. Ahead, see Vogue Singapore's lineup of unique, vibrant pride nail art designs to inspire your next manicure. @amberjhnails
1 / 10 Go chromatica
Nothing screams summer like a full chrome rainbow-inspired mani. This nail art design works great for a day out or a night at the club. @peachinails
2 / 10 Ombré hues
Ombré nails—aka airbrushed nails—are truly everywhere. Elevate the look by incorporating contrasting colours. @polished_yogi
3 / 10 Rainbow drip
Another modern take on the French mani, this version uses rainbow coloured polishes on each nail tip, lending it a drip effect. @nailartbyqueenie
4 / 10 Mermaidcore
Seeking something more feminine? Try this mermaid-inspired look with an iridescent finish and dreamy pastel tones. @sansungnails
5 / 10 Crystal claws
If you prefer something edgy yet practical, these fierce, blinged-out French tips will definitely set you apart. @clawswithcat
6 / 10 Rainbow waves
A special twist on the actual rainbow, make a splash with this wavy design. @habaneromochi
7 / 10 Studio 54
Be a literal disco ball with these holographic nails, that give off the illusion of mosaic tiles. @nolas.nails
8 / 10 A flower affair
With summery, flower accents and a crystal clear top coat, this minimalist look is a fresh way to show off your talons. @nails_by_jenna.k
9 / 10 Polka dots
In case you didn't know, polka dots are having a moment this summer. Incorporate this playful, Y2K-coded print into your next manicure. @nailsby.leni
10 / 10 3D plushies
Cute and colourful, this 3D nail art turns your nails into a plushy-themed universe.
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Straits Times
14 hours ago
- Straits Times
Extra, extra: Read all about the last newspaper hawker in Paris
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The profession may have reached its zenith in Paris in 1960, when American actress Jean Seberg was immortalised on film with several newspapers under her arm crying 'New York Herald Tribune!', as she strolled on the Champs-Elysees, pursued by French actor Jean-Paul Belmondo. Nobody in French-Swiss director Jean-Luc Godard's classic movie Breathless (1960) is buying The Trib except Belmondo's character, who is unhappy that the paper has no horoscope, but unhappier still to discover that his charm makes little impression on the beauty and faux American innocence of Seberg's character, yet another foreigner smitten by Paris and angling to make a buck. Mr Akbar is one of them, too. 'Sah-yay!' is roughly how his cry to buy sounds. Through persistence and good humour, he has become 'part of the cultural fabric of Paris', said Mr David-Herve Boutin, an entrepreneur active in the arts. 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'Perhaps it will help me get my French passport,' said Mr Akbar, who sometimes has a withering take on life, having seen much of its underside. He has a residence permit, but his application for French nationality is mired in Gallic bureaucracy. A stack of newspapers under the arm of Mr Akbar. PHOTO: DMITRY KOSTYUKOV/NYTIMES Mr Akbar moves at startling speed. A sinewy bundle of energy at 72, he clocks several kilometres a day, selling Le Monde, Les Echos and other daily newspapers from around noon until midnight. Dismissive of the digital, he has become a human networker of a district once dear to writers Jean-Paul Sartre and Ernest Hemingway, now overrun by brand-hungry tourists. 'How are you, dear Ali?' asks Ms Veronique Voss, a psychotherapist, as he enters Cafe Fleurus near the Jardin du Luxembourg. 'I worried about you yesterday because it was so hot.' Heat does not deter Mr Akbar, who has known worse. He thanks Ms Voss with a big smile and takes off his dark blue Le Monde cap. 'When you have nothing, you take whatever you can get,' he says. 'I had nothing.' At his next stop, an Italian cafe, Mr Jean-Philippe Bouyer, a stylist who has worked for French luxury brand Dior, greets Mr Akbar warmly. 'Ali is indispensable,' Mr Bouyer says. 'Something very positive and rare in our times emanates from him. He kept the soul of a child.' Born in 1953 into a family of 10 children, two of whom died young, Mr Akbar grew up in Rawalpindi amid rampant poverty and open sewers, eating leftovers, sleeping five to a room, leaving school when he was 12, working odd jobs and eventually teaching himself to read. Born in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, Mr Akbar left home in his late teens in search of a better life. PHOTO: DMITRY KOSTYUKOV/NYTIMES 'I did not want to wear clothes that reeked of misery,' he said. 'I always dreamed of giving my mother a house with a garden.' To advance, he had to leave. He procured a passport at 18. All he knew of Europe was the Eiffel Tower and Dutch tulips. A winding road took him by bus to Kabul, Afghanistan, where Western hippies, most of them high, abounded in 1970 – but that was not Mr Akbar's thing. He went on by road to Iran where, he said, 'the shah was an omnipresent God'. Eventually, he reached Athens, Greece, and wandered the streets looking for work. A businessperson took pity and, noting his eagerness, offered him a job on a ship. Mr Akbar cleaned the kitchen floor. He washed dishes. He was faced by aggressive mockery from bawdy shipmates for his refusal, as a Muslim, to drink. In Shanghai, he abandoned ship rather than face further taunting. The world is round, and around he went, back to Rawalpindi, and then on the westward road again to Europe. His mother deserved better – that conviction drove him through every humiliation. Visa issues in Greece and eventual expulsion landed him back in Pakistan a second time. His family thought he was mad, but, undaunted, he tried again. This time, he washed up in Rouen, France. It had taken only two years. After working there in a restaurant, he moved on to Paris in 1973. 'By the time I got to Paris, I had an overwhelming desire to anchor myself,' Mr Akbar said. 'Since I began circling the planet, I hadn't met many people who didn't disappoint me. 'But if you have no hope, you're dead.' He slept under bridges and in cellars. He encountered racism. He spent a couple of months in Burgundy harvesting cucumbers. Mr Akbar began hawking newspapers in Parisian streets in the early 1970s. PHOTO: DMITRY KOSTYUKOV/NYTIMES At last, in 1974, Mr Akbar found his calling when he ran into an Argentine student hawking newspapers. He inquired how he could do likewise and was soon in the streets of Paris with copies of satirical magazines Charlie Hebdo and Hara-Kiri, now defunct. He liked to walk, enjoyed contact with people and, even if margins were small, could eke out a living. Fast forward 51 years, and Mr Akbar is still at it. 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Business Times
20 hours ago
- Business Times
LVMH in talks to offload fashion label Marc Jacobs: sources
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Straits Times
a day ago
- Straits Times
Three-Michelin-star Paris restaurant Arpege switches to plant-based dishes
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