Leyna Bloom Breaks a Modeling Barrier. The model and actress is the first transgender woman of color to appear in the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue.
via: Page Six
Leyna Bloom is making history as the first transgender woman of color to appear in the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit issue.
āIām promoting something that has been missing in the world: trans beauty in all shapes and all sizes,ā the model and actress told The New York Times of landing the coveted gig.
āIām representing Filipina, Iām representing Black, I am representing people who have been immigrants. For them, Iām a vessel of change.ā
Bloom posed in 12 different one-piece suits for the groundbreaking shoot, calling the experience ābigger than my wildest infinite dreamsā in an Instagram post announcing her casting.
āMy autonomy and my anatomy are beautiful,ā she told the Times. āI want people to see that, and to see that you can be respected, appreciated and loved regardless of your body shape, sexuality and the color of your skin.ā
When asked about the long-running criticism of the glossyās sexy shoots, Bloom replied, āThis is a way of reaching the top of the food chain. Letās at least have this moment and say that we had it, and then we can go on to dismantle it.ā
The history-making model, who grew up on the South Side of Chicago, also hopes her casting will help provide more role models for trans children.
āUp to now, it was strictly, āOh, youāre trans so you cannot be a princess.āā she said. āBut when weāre seen in these spaces ā the runways, the magazines ā trans children can look up and say, āThis is what a princess looks like to me.āā
The swimsuit feature is just one of many high-fashion highlights in Bloomās career, which has also included an appearance in Vogue India, a Leviās campaign and a runway gig alongside Zendaya for Tommy Hilfiger.
Her casting comes on the heels of last yearās history-making issue, when Valentina Sampaio, 24, became the first transgender model to appear in SI Swimās pages.
While the 2021 issue wonāt hit stands until July 20, the magazine has teased many members of its lineup, which also includes COVID frontline worker Maggie Rawlins.
The iconic issue has strived for more diverse representation in recent years, with Ashley Graham cast as the first plus-size cover star in 2016 and Halima Aden featured as the first hijab-wearing model in 2019.
Representation matter, congrats Leyna.