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VIDEO: Super-stylish ‘granfluencer’ takes New York Fashion Week by storm at the age of 76 

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VIDEO: Super-stylish ‘granfluencer’ takes New York Fashion Week by storm at the age of 76 
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VIDEO: Super-stylish ‘granfluencer’ takes New York Fashion Week by storm at the age of 76 

2019-08-21 17:23 Last Updated At:17:24

Judith – who dubs herself The Style Crone – has amassed over 50,000 followers on Instagram.

A runway queen who dubs herself The Style Crone has amassed 50,000 Instagram followers and took New York Fashion Week by storm, when she captivated audiences modelling trendsetting designs – despite being 76!

Now a leading ‘granfluencer’ – a senior influencer on social media – former psychiatric nurse Judith Boyd, a widow with three children and eight grandchildren, prides herself on her ageless style.

But, an avid campaigner against ageism, she calls herself a ‘crone’ in a blog she has been writing for a decade, saying she uses the word to celebrate rather than denigrate older woman.

Judith, of Denver, Colorado, USA, said: “Crone used to be a positive description of an older woman, who would have been celebrated in traditional cultures, but today it is used to describe an ‘ugly old woman’.

“I want to change that and raise awareness of the original meaning of the word, to help celebrate older women.

“Ageism divides the generations, which is bad for both younger and older people, and I think, as a mature woman, it’s never been more important to be out there and visible and talking to people of all ages, which is what I do.”

But, while Judith’s effortless grace makes her look like she has been strutting down catwalks all her life, she modelled for the first time only a few years ago, when she was 72.

“I joined a modelling agency a couple of years ago,” she said “I’ve done a jewellery ad campaign and I’ve walked on the runway for a Denver designer, opening their show during New York Fashion Week earlier this year.

“It just goes to show it is never too late.”

Born in 1943 into a farming family in rural Minnesota in the American mid-west, and growing up with three brothers with no one giving two hoots about style, she regarded her single aunts, who had good jobs in the city, as the epitome of glamour.

She said: “I loved dressing up from a young age, although there was no focus on style in my immediate family.

“I remember having a number of aunts who worked in the city. They were secretaries and teachers and I thought they were very stylish.”

She continued: “Back then, you could not teach and be married, so the ones that were teachers must have been single and I did think they were very glamorous.”

Aged 18, Judith left the farm to start her nursing training in the city of Minneapolis, which was four hours away from where she grew up.

“I loved being away from home,” she recalled. “It was a very sophisticated city with lots of theatre, music and art, so it was my introduction to a bigger world.”

It was also where Judith started to develop her unique sense of style and her passion for vintage clothes, especially hats.

“I was working as a psychiatric nurse in the emergency department of a large hospital, so my day was filled with talking to people who were traumatised, suicidal, homicidal and psychotic,” she said.

“They would be in the middle of the biggest crisis of their lives and I found I was good at talking to them, because I was empathetic.”

“I would think about what to wear to work in the morning, because I no longer had to wear a nursing uniform and, in a way, my clothes prepared me for the day. They allowed me to express myself and I know my patients appreciated that in their day too.”

Having married when she was 23, in 1975 Judith parted from her first husband and the father of her eldest children, Troy, 49 and Tania, 47.

Moving to Denver, 900 miles away in Colorado to be closer to friends, two years later in 1977 she met Nelson, who she married in 1980.  The father of her third child, Camille, 38, he loved hats, too, and, like Judith, was innately stylish.

“Nelson was a very charismatic introvert,” she said. “He was very, very stylish and always wore a hat. When I started blogging, he was my first photographer.”

Describing their union as a “magical relationship,” she was devastated when he was diagnosed with cancer of unknown primary,  when doctors cannot identify where the disease started, in 2005, and was taken from her in 2011, aged 62, just nine months after they launched her style blog, which she says helped her to keep going after his death.

“I carried on blogging to honour Nelson. When he died, it was so hard to think about going on without him, but the blog helped,” she said.

She continued: “I blogged throughout the time he was dying. He would have a chemotherapy appointment and I would decide what to wear and then write a blog about what you wear to go to chemotherapy with your dying husband.

“Nelson would take the photos when we were alone together, before his treatment started, so he really helped me lay the foundations for the life I have now and my reinvention of myself after his death.”

Another person who helped Judith adjust to life without Nelson was her youngest daughter Camille, who introduced her to yoga.

“I went along to a class and really struggled through it,” said Judith, who now attends four hot dynamic yoga classes a week, to stay supple, flexible and keep in shape.

“I realised when Nelson died that there are things that happen that we cannot control in our lives, but there are also things like what we wear, what we eat and whether we exercise or not, which we do choose.”

Now an avid campaigner against ageism, Judith hopes that her blog and her positive attitude to life in her 70s, will inspire other women to realise that age is just a number.

“I’ve just started a new project working with widows where I combine my mental health background with my style in telling the story of my own loss and reinvention and I hope that helps inspire others,” she said.

And by continuing with her blogging and Instagram she feels she has found a way of keeping the love story she shared with Nelson alive.

“I have had some very positive responses and the modelling has been wonderful,” she said.

“It really was a way to lighten up a devastating experience, Nelson would have supported it completely.”

Judith blogs herewww.stylecrone.com. You can find her on Instagram here www.instagram.com/stylecrone

Next Article

The NFL draft gives players a chance to flaunt their style on the red carpet

2024-04-26 04:57 Last Updated At:05:21

DETROIT (AP) — The NFL draft gives players a chance to flaunt their style and many took advantage with custom-made suits.

A few hours before Quinyon Mitchell hit the red carpet Thursday in the shadow of the Fox Theatre, the former Toledo cornerback was getting his fit right.

Mitchell led two Baynes + Baker representatives and a personal shopper to his Detroit hotel room, where he tried on his custom-made black silk tuxedo with his name embroidered on the inside of the jacket.

After slipping on his Prada shoes, Mitchell invited his family to come up to his room for their feedback, which was overwhelmingly positive.

“I want to look good,” Mitchell told The Associated Press with a laugh when asked about how he landed on the look.

Baynes + Baker co-founder Ravi Punn fitted Mitchell and also created a suit for Drake Maye that the former North Carolina quarterback plans to wear Friday.

Punn said Mitchell's look exudes confidence.

“It fits great," said Punn, who works with Ethan Weisman of Pantheon Limited to design suits and fits for players. “Everybody’s going to be complimenting him all night. That just adds to everything.”

Mitchell and Maye were among the 13 first-round prospects to accept invitations to attend the draft. All of them had a chance to walk the red carpet along Woodward Avenue, just up the street from the site of the draft at Campus Martius Park, a few hours before the first pick was announced.

J.J. McCarthy was not a part of the festivities in the Motor City, but still had Alo Yoga make a custom charcoal gray suit.

A day before the draft, Caleb Williams was not very forthcoming about his look. Williams would only reveal he would be wearing black boots.

“I just finished my suit alterations and everything," Williams said. "I did a couple fittings. I did a couple drawings and things like that.”

Maye, meanwhile, did acknowledge his khaki suit with North Carolina blue accents was exactly what he was looking for.

“I keep it simple with my suit," he said. "I wear something North Carolina — represent — just because I love that school.”

Associated Press Writer Mike Householder contributed to this report.

Follow Larry Lage on X.

AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/NFL

A closeup of the custom suit by Ravi Punn of Baynes + Baker for Toledo cornerback Quinyon Mitchell is seen during a final fitting before the NFL football draft, Thursday, April 25, 2024, in Detroit. (AP Photo/Mike Householder)

A closeup of the custom suit by Ravi Punn of Baynes + Baker for Toledo cornerback Quinyon Mitchell is seen during a final fitting before the NFL football draft, Thursday, April 25, 2024, in Detroit. (AP Photo/Mike Householder)

Ravi Punn, right, of Baynes + Baker, adjusts the collar on Toledo cornerback Quinyon Mitchell during a final suit fitting for the NFL football draft, Thursday, April 25, 2024 in Detroit. (AP Photo/Mike Householder)

Ravi Punn, right, of Baynes + Baker, adjusts the collar on Toledo cornerback Quinyon Mitchell during a final suit fitting for the NFL football draft, Thursday, April 25, 2024 in Detroit. (AP Photo/Mike Householder)

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