Top 103 Quotes & Sayings by Leandra Medine

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American author Leandra Medine.
Last updated on November 8, 2024.
Leandra Medine

Leandra Medine Cohen is an American author, blogger, and humor writer best known for Man Repeller, an independent fashion and lifestyle website.

I started my blog when I was a senior in college, and I knew that all the people in my program were probably going to be applying for very similar jobs, so I needed something to separate my resume.
Making the decision to embrace or to shun makeup is one that should be contingent on nothing more, nothing less, than doing what makes you feel like the best version of yourself.
I gained this new sense of control over my love life because when I called myself a 'man repeller,' you assumed that being single is my choice. I'm man-repelling because that's how I want to dress. I'm not single because no men like me. I'm single because I choose fashion over a relationship.
I do not wear a lot of makeup. On social media, this seems to work both in my favor and against me. — © Leandra Medine
I do not wear a lot of makeup. On social media, this seems to work both in my favor and against me.
I'm not comfortable leaving the apartment if the bed isn't made or a chair isn't tucked into the table.
I haven't worn make-up since my wedding, and my husband loves me a lot.
One thing I didn't think upon getting married: that my style would - or could - change.
As someone who has been known for the way they've been dressed, it's almost OK for me to wear New Balances and sweat pants. I'm not necessarily moulding trends, but it's OK if I'm not adhering to them.
If I were going to prom again, I would wear a huge skirt and plain cotton tank. A big, poofy, flotation-device-sized skirt. I wish I had done that.
I am loving visible bras with shirts, high-waisted pants and oversize blazers.
I always wanted to make sure that I was honest to myself and that people wanted to hear an opinion that was authentic... I wanted Man Repeller to be a voice for women who felt like they didn't have a voice or for women who didn't know how to express their voice.
I feel like alternative piercings in the ear is this untapped way to festoon yourself. Not many people understand this, but it hurts so good. It's like getting dental work done. It hurts in the right way.
I never thought I'd wear Birkenstocks, but here I am! Having said that, I'm pretty sure I'd never wear Crocs.
I realized that if I were a 23-year-old girl getting married, and I wasn't struggling with it, that would likely mean that something was either massively wrong with me or that my brain is made up of delicately wrapped almonds that serve perfectly as party favors.
I wore some stupid brocade dress to my prom. — © Leandra Medine
I wore some stupid brocade dress to my prom.
You don't usually find an island in a New York kitchen.
I never borrowed money from Mom. I lived at home, but my parents never helped me. I worked hard and moved out. I treated my blog like a business; hard work is important.
Nothing's worse than oily skin.
Women totally dress for women. If we were dressed for men, we'd be prancing around in tight, tight, tight bodycon skirts and tops all day or really simple jeans and T-shirts.
I don't say in the morning, 'Look, Leandra, here are a bunch of women. Put that bronzer down.' It's more that I'm busy and whatever helps you get out the door and go to sleep easier.
What good is a wall without framed art? It is like the equivalent of the accessories that you choose to wear to decorate a black dress - precisely the stuff that makes the wall/dress you.
When I wake up, I put on what I'm in the mood to wear.
I wanted to be my own editor, and by 'editor,' I mean unedited-or.
Sometimes I wear red lipstick - it makes me feel sophisticated.
When push comes to shove, no one really cares what you're wearing except you.
When you have a voice, you also have a moral obligation to use that voice for good.
There's charm, in some capacity, to every trend. I just think practicality should die. Crocs - blech.
I think the thing about New York City real estate is that you kind of just take what you can get when you're renting.
The men who really get repelled by what you're wearing are a little shallow, and you probably don't want to date them anyway.
Our sartorial choices aren't that different from our psyches.
I do know that I would never - though you should never say never - work with a decorator, because I don't want to see the touch of someone else in my own space.
What a woman does or does not do to her face is personal. And as with most other things, makeup or a lack thereof can serve as either a prison or a fortress commanded by the mind: you can become a slave to it, or it can set you free.
Man Repeller is intended to chronicle all the fashion trends that women love and men hate. I started it because I am woman with a deep appreciation for harem pants. And sometimes blaming clothing on a sad love life is easier than blaming oneself!
It seems inevitable, if unfair, that when a woman is vying for a prominent position in office, her outfit choices will be analyzed to a degree considerably higher than those of her male counterpart by simple existence of gender stereotypes.
Next time you look in the mirror, close your eyes and ask yourself when you feel like the best version of you. When you open them, act on that.
Nothing feels better than constructing a beautiful sentence.
I want Man Repeller to feel like you're waking up in the morning, you're calling your girlfriend, you don't know what she is going to say, you don't really care what she has to say, but you know you're going to like it, and you're going to laugh and hang up the phone and feel ready to take on the day with all this new knowledge.
I have a degree in journalism, which is something that I make very clear very frequently just so people are aware of it. I went to school to write... Editorial integrity is very important to me.
I always grew up with the idea that in order to be a successful writer, I should have a book published. — © Leandra Medine
I always grew up with the idea that in order to be a successful writer, I should have a book published.
I have always had a fleeting relationship with clothing.
People often ask me if my parents helped me. My mother did lend me $10 to register the domain name.
I'm not dressing with men in mind at all. I'm just going to wear what I want to wear. It makes things easier, too.
I have always, always loved words.
I understand that there are thick, dark circles under my eyes. I have grown to appreciate them. I have noticed that my nose grows a little hookier on a near-monthly basis. That's fine. I know there are wrinkles ready to stake their claim as full time residents on my forehead any moment now. My dad has those, too, and I find that endearing.
As long as you are promoting something that you really believe in - yes, it's incredible to see that designer earn the esteem they deserve - but there's something to be said about the fact that if you're convicted about an opinion, and you really believe something's great, you're not going to credit yourself for their success.
I love manicures - I'm really into colorful nails.
Fashion is used as a tool to convey a point about who we are or potentially want to be. Whether or not a civilian curates his or her own aesthetic is up that person, but it is an integral part of one's public image.
I'm probably most inspired by good street style that features items I already own; it's always great to see how another person wears something you have, which sort of reinvents it for you.
Sloane Crosley and David Sedaris are two of my favorite writers; they're the kind of writers who make you feel like, 'I can do this. I want to do this.'
I'm really happy that people understand that man-repelling is a good thing. I was afraid people would think I was mocking fashion, and it's like, 'No, I swear, I'm wearing feathered sleeves as I write this!'
People always ask me how I muster the strength to be so open about things, and I explain to them that I took the Myers-Briggs test, like, four times, and every single time, I ranked an 87 percent extrovert, so it would probably take more strength for me to shut up.
You have to keep a feeling of goodness in your exteriors. — © Leandra Medine
You have to keep a feeling of goodness in your exteriors.
Don't get me wrong - I'm not against makeup. If I could manage looking like 'me' in a way that also read as tastefully, invisibly airbrushed, I'd sign up for that faster than you could choose a filter to do it for me.
No matter the candidate, every detail in a campaign is carefully and strategically framed for our consumption. The devil is in them.
Initially what defined me as a 'man repeller' was my conscious effort to wear clothing that was attractive in my opinion but not necessarily in a man's opinion.
I knew I wanted to be a fashion writer but didn't want to contribute to the over-saturated market unless I could contribute in a meaningful way.
I don't necessarily see my not wearing makeup as a social comment or that it's because I work in a female-dominated industry.
I think men like things tight and simple.
I got a C in art when I was in 11th grade. That it is even possible to come out of a high school art class with a C is wondrous, especially considering the creative license we were encouraged to use to, for lack of a better axiom, color outside the lines.
When you're writing a blog post, you can take solace in knowing that you will immediately know how people will respond to it, and if the criticism is bad, then that's fine because you can work on that and fix it, and if it's good, then that's great because you know what to do in the future. It gets pushed down so quickly.
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