{"id":107017,"date":"2012-09-17T13:51:37","date_gmt":"2012-09-17T20:51:37","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/heartifb.com\/?p=107017"},"modified":"2024-02-14T22:59:33","modified_gmt":"2024-02-15T06:59:33","slug":"will-the-blogger-making-10k-outside-nyfw-please-stand-up","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/heartifb.com\/will-the-blogger-making-10k-outside-nyfw-please-stand-up\/","title":{"rendered":"Will The Blogger Making $10K Outside NYFW Please Stand Up?"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Last week, the New York Times<\/a> published an article about how bloggers were paid to wear clothes to Fashion Week so they can get shot by street style photographers, “Popular bloggers and other so-called influencers can earn $2,000 to $10,000 for a single appearance in their wares.” For those in the blogging business this news came as a shock,\u00a0 Yuli Ziv tweeted<\/a>, “I want to see a copy of the $10K check a brand paid to a blogger for a single appearance in their wares during So, does this really happen? If a blogger did get paid money, it would have to be a blogger who has a very good chance of getting photographed or had a great reach, and the photograph being republished. Leandra Medine, wrote of the article on Manrepeller<\/a>, “It was a smart read: interesting, informative and conceivably true.” No one doubts that it's a practice that's conceivabl<\/em>e, but someone has yet to admit to being a part of it.<\/p>\n \u201cI honestly have never been paid to wear clothes for fashion week” ~Nicole Warne, Gary Pepper<\/p><\/blockquote>\n The Times highlighted a few bloggers in the article without directly saying any of them were paid to wear clothes to fashion week. Nicole Warne of Gary Pepper, who has been shot on the likes of Street Peeper, and Bazaar<\/a>, was mentioned in the original NYT article about wearing gifted clothes, a common practice in the blogging industry. “I honestly have never been paid to wear clothes for fashion week or on my blog for that matter. I think a blogs survival relies heavily on the trust you have with your readers.” Says Nicole in response to the article. She went on to say that no one identified themselves from the New York Times during fashion week when asking about her clothing.<\/p>\n#<\/s>NYFW<\/strong>. ” For others on the brand side, this may not have been so shocking. On Facebook, Dina Fierro, HL Group's\u00a0 Managing Director, Social Media commented on IFB's Facebook Page<\/a>: “I can confirm that it does indeed happen, though I find it an unfortunate use of marketing dollars.” When contacted to elaborate and or confirm Fierro declined to comment.<\/p>\n