Explore popular quotes and sayings by an English journalist Alexa Chung.
Last updated on November 23, 2024.
Alexa Chung is a British writer, blogger, television presenter, internet personality, model, and fashion designer. She wrote the book It (2013). Her fashion label Alexa Chung, stylized ALEXACHUNG, launched in May 2017 and closed in 2022.
My dad cut my hair once - I wanted a bob and he gave me a bowl cut. That was a tough few years.
My best party friend...? Fifi Brown. And Poppy Delevingne. She's so fun and so inclusive - she really is the glue.
I don't think love should make you feel uneasy. When you feel sick, I don't think that's love - that's infatuation.
I've come to terms with the fact that if you're on TV, lots of people like you and lots of people hate you, and once you're OK with that, you apply it to everything.
A bad outfit can really get me down. If I'm wearing something really normal and boring, it's like torture.
Not everything happens for a reason. Sometimes life just sucks.
I'm not 100% nice all the time, so I find it quite hard to be really pleasant.
My friends found out that I was writing a book on Twitter. It didn't seem worth mentioning over dinner. They're all so successful themselves.
I prefer using cream-based products on my skin. I love having that summery dewy skin - I like using cream blushers as well.
If I'm doing my hair myself, I just wash it and let it naturally dry. I'm actually quite good at doing hair; if I wear it up I usually do it myself.
I didn't moisturise when I was younger, but when I got to 27 I decided to start slathering myself in oil, and now I'm obsessed with moisturising.
I'm always hairy. I swear too much.
If my boyfriend finds me sexy, then I don't need that kind of male attention from anyone else.
I'm rubbish - I'm really not good at my beauty regimes.
I think it's cool that London Fashion Week is about young designers trying wacky things.
I used to have a voice because I was interviewing people and writing, but as soon as I got swept up in the fashion world, I was just a pretty girl at a party wearing a pretty dress.
I'm interested in aesthetics, in the way things look, in finding something in an image that maybe people haven't seen.
My look is pretty low maintenance, I have a great team around me for hair and make-up, and they have also taught me some great tricks over the years for when I'm doing my own.
No one says the word 'quirky' much in England. I guess because people are more naturally eccentric.
I think Maje typifies that French vibe where it's simple items that are very practical, very wearable but also, like, incredibly chic and expensive-looking.
I'm not preaching about things you should do, I'm not political or anything. I'm probably not the best role model.
Music is my sport, and I'm the number-one athlete.
I respect people that find writing easy, because I have focus problems. I'll spend five days eating cereal and YouTubing and two hours writing the article.
I'd love to interview Mick Jagger, but that might be scary.
I think you achieve a lot more through love than negativity.
Everything doesn't have to be perfect, I've realised. You can learn as you go.
I worry all the time that I'm going to run out of ideas, you know? I always tell my mom my fashion ideas, because I know she'll remember them.
I don't ever want to stop learning. And I really want to learn French fluently. It would be great to go and live in France.
I think it's every girl's dream, a little bit, to be a model because it seems from the outside to be a glamorous industry and I was really into fashion, and I remember just being excited and wanting to be part of that.
I went out with a 40-year-old when I was 19, and since then, I don't really think much about numbers meaning anything. But I do feel like maybe I've neglected to work on developing emotionally and taking care of myself.
Tech companies approach you to hold something in a picture and then say, 'This is what I want you to write on your Twitter.' There are people who get away with that and look really cool doing it, but I'm just not one of them.
I just don't like people to be dictated to. I think you should dress however you want.
I've got an allergy to looking too neat.
My father taught me how to draw horses - for this I shall be eternally grateful.
I'm never going to be one of those people who is good at organization. But I'm very visual. I have a catalog in my head of things I already own, so it's easy to shop and I always know exactly what I'm looking for.
Often, I do translatlantic overnight flights from New York, and when I land, I have to do my eyes - I feel weird without it.
I mix my own lipsticks, so I don't really keep track of the brand as it's usually a number of them I've smushed together.
I would get very bored if I just did one thing.
It's funny because I think that both France and Britain are known for their distinctive styles, and everyone says that France is so chic and elegant but I think, more than that, French women are renowned for dressing in what suits them.
I didn't mean to be a TV presenter, I just hated modeling. It feels very odd that it's turned into this 'It-girl' thing. What does that even mean? I wear clothes and I go out. It's so weird.
I wash my face and then use lots of moisturiser.
I'm always helping out girlfriends, and then I'm wondering, who's going to look after me?
When I was a teenager, I used to come to Selfridges, and it was very swanky and overwhelming, and I'd think, 'Wow, this is amazing.' I would never have imaged having my own area in the beauty hall! It's incredible.
No experience exists unless it's a shared one.
I play guitar a bit. I'm trying to learn drums - I feel like I can play violin. I've never tried, but I just feel like I can.
I always write 'Magic Potion' on my perfume bottles so when I use them, it feels magical - I make spells in the morning when I put them on.
At school, a careers adviser asked me what I wanted to be, and I said 'fashion journalist,' so writing for 'Vogue' has provided me with the opportunity to fulfill a dream.
I'm really interested in photography, like every other human being.
London Fashion Week is so different from any of the others. Compared to the strictness in New York, London seems freer from commercial constraints. Truer to the process, to street style, to a sense of humour.
If I can't even be bothered to brush my hair, I don't think I should start getting face work... I think it would look a bit try-hard.
When I was a model, I started with an opinion, but was encouraged to lose it. It began as play-acting, but then I lost sight of myself a bit: so when I did the audition for 'Popworld' and they asked my opinion, I felt like crying with happiness.
I get to work with great photographers, wear lovely clothes, be part of the creative process.
I don't like it when people don't know the difference between 'their', 'they're', 'there'.
I tend to splurge on fancy dresses because I always think I'll get a lot of wear out of them, but it's false logic. You should really spend more money on the things you wear every day, like jeans.
I'd like to give anyone else a go at being scrutinised. Daily. It's not easy.
Stick to the classics, and you can't ever go wrong. I see old ladies on the street who have fabulous style and realize it's because they are probably wearing really classic items that they've had for years and years. I think if you find something that suits you, you should just stick to it.
Whoever it is who's filtering stuff makes it seem like women want to be more than men. My understanding... is that we're asking to be treated the same.
I feel like some women do get away with doing these sexy shoots and looking like they're being really empowered. For me, I'd feel really uncomfortable in that situation and a bit like I was being taken advantage of.
I'm in love with lots of different things. I do love love, though. I don't think love should make you feel uneasy. When you feel sick, I don't think that's love - that's infatuation. Someone who makes you feel like that is exciting - it's the one that you imagine when you think of an amazing affair - but that's not actually a stable love.
When I was going to Paris for Paris Fashion Week, I'd often walk down the street and go into all the different shops that we didn't necessarily have in the U.K., and Maje was definitely one of the ones that stood out for me.