Magazines for Moms, Modern Parenting, Career Moms https://mylemonmagazine.com/category/magazines-for-moms/ Magazine for happy kids and cool Mums. Fashion, Lifestyle, Home, People, Travel Wed, 26 Nov 2025 14:59:49 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 https://mylemonmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/cropped-icone-2-100x100.png Magazines for Moms, Modern Parenting, Career Moms https://mylemonmagazine.com/category/magazines-for-moms/ 32 32 Inside our Editor-in-Chief’s Current Fixations: Barbara’s Obsessions https://mylemonmagazine.com/barbarascurrentobsessions/ Mon, 24 Nov 2025 14:29:57 +0000 https://mylemonmagazine.com/?p=35528 Discover what Lemon’s fearless leader is devouring, wearing, bookmarking, and quietly spiraling over this season! If you’ve ever wondered what fuels Lemon’s unmistakable aesthetic.. the sharp instincts, the soft chaos, the magic-touch curation, look no further than Bárbara! Our Editor-in-Chief moves through the world like a cultural antenna, catching micro-trends before they become headlines and […]

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Discover what Lemon’s fearless leader is devouring, wearing, bookmarking, and quietly spiraling over this season!

If you’ve ever wondered what fuels Lemon’s unmistakable aesthetic.. the sharp instincts, the soft chaos, the magic-touch curation, look no further than Bárbara!

Our Editor-in-Chief moves through the world like a cultural antenna, catching micro-trends before they become headlines and turning everyday life into a moodboard.

These are the fixations currently living rent-free in her mind:

YSL Skirt

"A quick message to Anthony Vaccarello and all the team at YSL "Hi, my name is Barbara, and i have been addicted to Saint Laurent for the last 30 years. I'm not an influencer or celebrity, but i also take gifts.."

Classic Land Rover Defender

"Any old defender is love at first sight for me!!"

The Assouline Gypset Trilogy

"Gypset book by Assouline, curated and written by someone that finally gets us gypsetters, the one and only Julia chaplin."

Carolina Curado

"love it love it love it!"

Jacob Elordi

"Jacob Elordi... I really don't have much to say.."

Chloé Dress

"Gone with the wind with this Chloé dress? Anytime!"

Lou Doillon

"My style crush Miss Lou Doillon!!! Well, you can't blame her she is the daugther of Jane Birken herself peeps!"

Miu Miu Beau Bag

"Miu Miu, i really don't know what is it with this bag, but it gets to you!!"

This.

"Zara knows what it's doing with zara home!"

Cartier Tank Louis Watch

"I mean... its Cartier.."

Mick Jagger by Andy Warhol

"I mean anything by Andy Warhol is an obsessions for me!"

Prada Jacket

"Hello Prada! A round of applause please!!"

Architect Ricardo Bofil!

"I'm fanatic about archs everywhere, and no one does it better than him!"

White Shirt

"11 of these please and thank you COS!"

A stay at Azulik in Tulum!

"I have been obsessed over the architect Roth, the master mind behind Azulik! Where nature is part of the architecture!"

Acerbis Storet

"It would fit in my house like a glove!"

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Where Nature and Fashion Blend: The Wearable Alchemy of Katerina Shukshina https://mylemonmagazine.com/when-a-leaf-becomes-a-jacket-the-wearable-alchemy-of-katerina-shukshina/ Wed, 12 Nov 2025 12:57:03 +0000 https://mylemonmagazine.com/?p=34858 Katerina Shukshina & Her Wearable Art from Nature’s Materials There’s something quietly radical in the way Katerina Shukshina turns the everyday into the extraordinary.. Working under the Instagram handle @shu_katerina, the Russian-based artist uses leaves, roots, peas, cabbage and vegetable stalks to craft pieces of wearable art that occupy the space between fashion, sculpture and […]

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Katerina Shukshina & Her Wearable Art from Nature’s Materials

There’s something quietly radical in the way Katerina Shukshina turns the everyday into the extraordinary..

Working under the Instagram handle @shu_katerina, the Russian-based artist uses leaves, roots, peas, cabbage and vegetable stalks to craft pieces of wearable art that occupy the space between fashion, sculpture and poetry.

Nature, Memory & Material

Shukshina’s creative journey begins in the countryside of her youth. As she explains:

“Plants were a part of life … I looked at maple winglets as potential earrings, lichen patterns as a print in clothes.”

With no formal fashion training, she spent years teaching history before embracing her creative calling. Her process is intuitive, when a particular leaf or stalk catches her eye, she molds it into form without waiting for permission from trends or style editors.

The Work: Wearable, Poetic, Ephemeral

Some of her standout pieces:

  • A jacket composed entirely of cabbage leaves, photographed and subsequently fed to chickens.

  • A bag crafted from Brussels sprouts and other garden materials.

  • Shoes made from vegetables, roots and blooms: a radical reinterpretation of footwear.

The aesthetic is uncanny: familiar shapes (jackets, bags, shoes) made out of organic matter, which draws attention not just to the object but the idea of transformation, the material that once grew in the soil now drapes the body.

Our Thoughts: Why Her Work Matters So Much

  1. Material resonance: The choice of organic materials forces us to reconsider what fashion can be. These aren’t mass-produced synthetics; they are fragile, seasonal, specific. That fragility becomes part of the message.

  2. Wearability as concept: You correctly noted you’re unsure if the pieces are fully “functional”. That’s the beauty: they straddle the boundary of function and art. They ask: What if clothes reminded us of nature, time, and impermanence?

  3. Nature + identity: In a world of fast fashion, Shukshina’s work slows things down. She invites the wearer to embody nature, not just wear it. That act becomes both playful and profound.

  4. Narrative potential: Each piece tells a story of childhood, of garden seasons, of materials that were once alive. The work resonates with memory, place, texture.

Some Considerations

  • Durability & practicality: Indeed, many of her works are ephemeral: they may wilt or degrade. But that is part of their power: they ask us to value the moment, the fresh material, the now.

  • Audience & impact: While the pieces are more show-piece than everyday staple, they function brilliantly in editorial, exhibition and conceptual contexts. They may not fit a daily wardrobe, but they redefine fashion’s boundaries.

  • Sustainability angle: Her approach is low-impact, with natural materials, reuse and composting deeply embedded in her practice. That positions her work in the conversation of eco-fashion but also in a fine-art frame.

Final Thoughts

Katerina Shukshina is a reminder that fashion doesn’t always have to be about wear-and-wash, trend-and-discard. It can be about wonder, transformation, nature and story.

Her work isn’t about simply dressing a body, it’s about dressing an idea, a memory, a relationship with the earth.

If her pieces aren’t always “functional” in the traditional sense, they’re functional in a richer sense: they function to provoke, to enchant, and to invite reflection.

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Warped Threads: The Surreal World of Faig Ahmed https://mylemonmagazine.com/warped-threads-the-surreal-world-of-faig-ahmed/ Tue, 04 Nov 2025 15:08:38 +0000 https://mylemonmagazine.com/?p=34650 When carpets melt, pixels weave and tradition rebels: Faig Ahmed’s art rewrites the story of craft and culture. The Artist • The Vision Faig Ahmed is an Azerbaijani contemporary visual artist (born 1982 in Sumqayıt, Azerbaijan) who has gained international acclaim for his surreal re-imaginings of traditional oriental rugs and textiles. Graduating from the Sculpture […]

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When carpets melt, pixels weave and tradition rebels: Faig Ahmed’s art rewrites the story of craft and culture.

The Artist • The Vision

Faig Ahmed is an Azerbaijani contemporary visual artist (born 1982 in Sumqayıt, Azerbaijan) who has gained international acclaim for his surreal re-imaginings of traditional oriental rugs and textiles.

Graduating from the Sculpture Faculty at the Azerbaijan State Academy of Fine Arts in 2004, Ahmed merges craft and concept in a way few artists do: he takes the rich heritage of carpet-weaving and intersects it with digital aesthetics, optical illusions, and sculptural forms.

What Makes His Work Unique

  • Tradition meets disruptionAhmed begins with a foundation in traditional Azerbaijani rugs, historically crafted, woven by hand, deeply linked to cultural identity. And then he distorts them: pixels, melting forms, drips, unexpected 3-D bulges.

  • Material and meaning – Though rooted in craft, his works often look like glitch art, or textiles melting into space. For example, in Oiling (2012), a rug appears to dissolve “into a wavy pattern of oil on water.”

  • Global resonanceAhmed’s art has been exhibited worldwide: from the Venice Biennale (2007) to venues like the Victoria and Albert Museum (London) and the Azerbaijan National Carpet Museum (Baku).

  • Questioning perceptionHis carpets aren’t just floor coverings or decorative pieces: they’re visual puzzles that ask us how we see, how craft carries meaning, and how heritage can change in a digital age.

Signature Works & Themes

  • Melting Rugs Series – Powerful examples where carpets seem to puddle onto the floor, as if gravity or time has softened their structure.

  • Pixelation & Glitches – Some works introduce pixel-like distortions into rug patterns, hinting at digital culture meeting ancient craft.

  • Spatial Installations – Beyond singular rugs, Ahmed has created room-sized installations where threads extend beyond frames, carpets climb walls, or viewer presence becomes part of the artwork.

  • Cultural Memory & Identity – By using the carpet as both medium and metaphor, Ahmed engages with Azerbaijani craft heritage, shifting borders, and the way cultural symbols evolve.

Why It Matters

In a world that often treats tradition as static, Ahmed’s work suggests heritage is dynamic: capable of remixing, re-thinking, and bending form.

He uses craft not as a museum piece, but as a living canvas. His carpets are both aesthetic objects and cultural commentary. They invite us to step on something familiar and encounter surprise instead.

The Impact on Contemporary Art & Design

For families, design lovers and style-conscious audiences, Ahmed’s works signal a few interesting takeaways:

  • Textiles as art – What used to live on the floor or wall becomes three-dimensional sculpture. Interiors and art blur.

  • Craft with edge – The fusion of traditional techniques with contemporary digital thinking reflects a wider move in design: honouring roots while embracing innovation.

  • Visual storytelling – His pieces carry narratives of migration, change, identity and memory, all through form, colour, and distortion.

Final Thoughts

Faig Ahmed reminds us that the things we thought we knew: rugs, patterns, craft, can be reframed, re-layered, made strange, made new.

For anyone interested in design, interiors, culture or art, his work opens a door: perhaps into a world where past and future braid together.

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Jane Goodall: The Woman Who Changed How We See the Wild https://mylemonmagazine.com/jane-goodall-the-woman-who-changed-how-we-see-the-wild/ Thu, 02 Oct 2025 10:22:31 +0000 https://mylemonmagazine.com/?p=32945 How a young woman with a notebook redefined science, hope, and humanity’s bond with nature When you think of true pioneers, people who stepped into the unknown with nothing but curiosity and conviction, Jane Goodall’s name almost always rises to the top. For over six decades, she has been the voice of the voiceless: the […]

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How a young woman with a notebook redefined science, hope, and humanity’s bond with nature

When you think of true pioneers, people who stepped into the unknown with nothing but curiosity and conviction, Jane Goodall’s name almost always rises to the top.

For over six decades, she has been the voice of the voiceless: the chimpanzees of Gombe, the forests that cradle life, and the urgent call for us humans to reconnect with the natural world before it’s too late.

But Jane Goodall’s story isn’t just about science or conservation, it’s about courage, compassion, and an unshakable belief that every individual can make a difference.

A Young Woman With a Notebook

In 1960, Jane arrived in Tanzania with no formal degree in science, just a notebook, binoculars, and an unstoppable love for animals.

The world of academia didn’t quite know what to do with her, she wasn’t a trained scientist, and she insisted on giving names (not numbers) to the chimpanzees she studied.

But this decision, once criticized, became revolutionary.

Through patience and empathy, Jane observed behaviors that shocked the scientific community: chimpanzees using tools, forming strong social bonds, grieving, and even showing aggression.

In those quiet forests, she didn’t just study chimps; she helped redefine what it means to be human.

From the Forest to the World Stage

Today, Jane Goodall is much more than a primatologist. She’s a global force for environmental action.

Through the Jane Goodall Institute and her youth program, Roots & Shoots, she has inspired millions of young people to become changemakers in their own communities proving that conservation isn’t just about saving wildlife, but about reshaping how we live and connect.

Her message is always grounded in hope. Even as she speaks urgently about climate change, deforestation, and biodiversity loss, she never lets despair take the lead.

Instead, she reminds us that nature is resilient and so are we.

The Power of One

Perhaps Jane’s greatest lesson is deceptively simple: every single person makes an impact every single day.

Whether that impact is positive or negative is up to us.

She often tells audiences:

“You cannot get through a single day without having an impact on the world around you. What you do makes a difference, and you have to decide what kind of difference you want to make.”

It’s a call to action that strips away excuses.

You don’t need to be a scientist in Tanzania to create change, you can start with your plate, your purchases, your voice, your community.

Honoring Her Legacy & Continuing the Journey

At nearly 91 years old, Jane Goodall still spent more than 300 days a year traveling, speaking, and inspiring.

Her stamina was remarkable, but what’s even more striking was her clarity: a deep, unwavering conviction that if we lose hope, we lose everything.

Jane Goodall has given us more than groundbreaking science. She’s given us a vision: a reminder that humanity and nature aren’t separate, but intertwined.

And if we nurture that bond with love and respect, we just might create a future where both can thrive.

Goodall’s contributions have been recognized globally: in 2025, she was awarded the U.S. Presidential Medal of Freedom, one of the nation’s highest civilian honors.

Her work has left an indelible mark on science, conservation, and environmental activism.

As we reflect on her life, we are reminded of the power of one individual’s dedication to making the world a better place.

While Jane Goodall may no longer be with us, her spirit lives on through the work of the Jane Goodall Institute, the Roots & Shoots program, and the countless individuals she inspired.

Her legacy serves as a beacon, guiding us toward a future where humans live in harmony with nature and all its creatures.

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Power Mum:
Schynaider Moura https://mylemonmagazine.com/power-mum-schynaider-moura/ Wed, 24 Sep 2025 14:26:37 +0000 https://mylemonmagazine.com/?p=32730 She began her modelling career at the age of 13 after winning a contest.. She’s been on the catwalk ever since. But there’s more to Schynaider Moura’s life than what’s going on in the fashion world. At home she has three daughters that make her life even richer. Schynaider is a supermum who speaks to […]

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Schynaider Moura appeared first on My Lemon Magazine.

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She began her modelling career at the age of 13 after winning a contest..

She’s been on the catwalk ever since. But there’s more to Schynaider Moura’s life than what’s going on in the fashion world.

At home she has three daughters that make her life even richer.

Schynaider is a supermum who speaks to us about the challenges of balancing motherhood with career and preparing her girls for today’s world. 

By: Bárbara Perino 

Photography: Erika Verginelli

LEMON Magazine [LEMON] – You’re the mother of three girls. How old are they and how old were you when you became a mother? 

Schynaider Moura [S.M.] – Yes, I’m mother to three girls: Anne Marie, who’s 10, Elle-Marie, who’s 6, and Gioe Marie, who’s 5. I was 20 when I first got pregnant. It’s unbelievable how fast you grow up when you become a mother. It’s incredible to follow our children’s growth and see ourselves mirrored in so many of their attitudes and tastes. Being a mother is a magical thing! 

LEMON – How does a supermodel manage to be a supermum at the same time? What’s the trick to balancing professional and personal life? 

S.M. – There is no trick. The question is how to prioritise each stage of life. When the girls were born, I made a decision to dedicate myself to them. It was important for me to be there in their earliest years, their first experiences, to be present for their first words. I wanted to experience motherhood in all its fullness. Today I am able to be both a mother and to deal with my professional life. 

LEMON – What’s your secret to being a supermum? 

S.M. – I think the secret is to keep the channel of dialogue permanently open. I want my daughters to see me as a support, a friend they can trust. 

LEMON – How do you raise your daughters? 

S.M. – I want to raise them with a sense of both freedom and responsibility. I want them to discover their aptitudes and tastes and to know how to respect diversity in others. I want them to know that they can be whatever they want to be, but always with compassion and a sense of civic responsibility. 

LEMON – What do you feel is your biggest challenge as a mother? 

S.M. – There are many challenges, but perhaps the main one is to prepare the girls for an increasingly changing world. There is no perfect formula for how to be a mother or how to deal with children, but I believe there are some values we can always follow, such as empathy, respect and good citizenship. 

LEMON – What’s your routine when you’re with your daughters? 

S.M. – When we’re together, I help them in their homework and we have our moment of group reading, when I sit down and read them a story. On the weekends we usually eat ice cream together [laughs]. 

LEMON – Do they follow your work as a model? How do they react when they see their mother at a fashion show or in a magazine? 

S.M. – They love it. They already understand my work because I’ve taken them to photo shoots and shows from an early age. I recently appeared in an episode of a soap opera and they said: “Look, mummy’s on TV!” 

We also have a family cooking routine. 

LEMON – You are a successful model. Do you feel you’ve reached the pinnacle of your career or do you think there’s still a lot more to achieve? 

S.M. – I started at 13 when I won a competition [Elite Model Look, in 2001] and went on the international stage in Nice, France. I knew I wanted to work in fashion since I was a teenager. I’ve travelled the world as a model. Today, at 31, I feel there are still plenty of goals to reach. I want to feel stimulated and driven to go even further, to set new goals and pursue them until they are achieved. 

LEMON – When did you feel you had really made it as a model? 

S.M. – When I was invited to my first job abroad. It gave me a feeling that things could go well for me. And in the end they have. I can only be thankful for the career I’ve built and for all the support I’ve received from my family. 

LEMON – With all the problems in the world, are you afraid for your daughters’ future? 

S.M. – I fear intolerance, but at the same time I realise that the younger generations are more open and more empathetic. I want to believe that we are building a better society and a more humane world. 

LEMON – Your image is very important to your career. Could you share some of your secrets to keeping in shape after motherhood with us? 

S.M. – I have an exercise routine. I like to run and do yoga and meditation. I believe in balancing body and mind. I maintain a balanced diet, I try to eat organic food and eat at set times. 

LEMON – Who are your role models? 

S.M. – Definitely my parents. They are my base and the reference point I use in raising my daughters. 

LEMON – What would you like to have been told before you became a mother? 

S.M. – That being a mother is a daily process of self-discovery. That being a mother is a test of our limits in patience, love and dedication, but also of our physical endurance in terms of how few hours of sleep we get. 

LEMON – And what advice would you like to give to other women with the same profession as you who are thinking of becoming mothers? 

S.M. – Maintain the faith that everything will work out. Everything is possible with a little organisation! Being a mother is an incredible experience that only makes life richer. 

LEMON – Finally, do any of your daughters want to follow in your footsteps? How do you feel about that possibility? 

S.M. – I don’t know if any of them would like to pursue a modelling career. If so, they’ll have my full support and that of their father. Anne loves taking pictures and she’s a super creative little girl. Who knows…? 

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Schynaider Moura appeared first on My Lemon Magazine.

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Meet Owen Cooper: 15 Years Old, Emmy Winner, History-Maker https://mylemonmagazine.com/meet-owen-cooper-15-years-old-emmy-winner-history-maker/ Tue, 16 Sep 2025 11:16:30 +0000 https://mylemonmagazine.com/?p=32363 How 15-Year-Old Owen Cooper Became the Youngest Male Emmy Winner Ever Some lives change, truly, in the blink of an eye. Owen Cooper’s story proves that you can go from drama class to history books in just a few years, so fast it almost feels cinematic. The Moment Everyone Will Remember At the 77th Primetime […]

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How 15-Year-Old Owen Cooper Became the Youngest Male Emmy Winner Ever

Some lives change, truly, in the blink of an eye. Owen Cooper’s story proves that you can go from drama class to history books in just a few years, so fast it almost feels cinematic.

The Moment Everyone Will Remember

At the 77th Primetime Emmy Awards in 2025, the world watched as 15-year-old Owen Cooper won Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie for his role in Adolescence.

He played Jamie Miller, a 13-year-old who’s arrested for a classmate’s murder.

It was his first ever professional acting role, and suddenly, his name is etched into Emmy history as the youngest male actor to win in that category.

From Blank Slate to Breakthrough

Cooper didn’t grow up in the industry. No acting pedigree. No previous TV credits before Adolescence.

He was taking drama classes for fun.

Then this role came, over 500 young actors auditioned, and something in his audition let the casting team know he had “it.”

He filmed Adolescence in 2024, aged 14, arriving on set as a total newcomer.

It’s the kind of debut that doesn’t just happen, it’s earned, bit by bit.

The result? Critical praise, internet buzz, and an Emmy win that breaks decades-old records.

The Weight of This Win

  • Owen beat some heavy-hitters names like Javier Bardem, Peter Sarsgaard, Bill Camp, Ashley Walters. That’s powerful.

  • His win didn’t erase earlier records: Roxana Zal is still the youngest Emmy acting winner ever, having won at age 14 back in 1984. But for male actors, this is new terrain.

  • He’s also the youngest ever nominated in that specific category, and now the first to turn that nomination into the win.

What He Said on Stage

Owen’s acceptance speech wasn’t polished Hollywood prose, it was raw, grateful, real:

“It’s so surreal. When I started drama classes, I didn’t expect to be here tonight. But I think it proves that if you listen, you focus, you step outside your comfort zone, you can achieve anything in life.” 

He also made sure to recognize the team behind Adolescence: the writers, directors, producers, insisting that the Emmy with his name on it actually belonged to many people.

Why We’re Watching

This isn’t just another “young star wins award” headline.

Owen’s story points to something deeper:

  • The way storytelling in TV is shifting: stories about youth, internet culture, accountability, and complexity are being told with rawness and care.

  • How young talent can break through without decades of experience or legacy. It’s not perfection; it’s persistence.

  • What it means for dreams: that stepping into discomfort, taking classes, going to auditions, all those small, often unglamorous steps, those can lead somewhere extraordinary.

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Squid Game’s Viral Doll Voice Belongs to Her https://mylemonmagazine.com/squid-games-viral-doll-voice-belongs-to-her/ Thu, 03 Jul 2025 12:51:36 +0000 https://mylemonmagazine.com/?p=27629 Meet Reagan To: Actress, Content Creator, Dance Champion, and the Rising Star Behind One of TV’s Most Iconic Voices If you’ve ever heard a spine-chilling “Red Light… Green Light” you’ve already met Reagan To, the voice behind the Squid Game doll that launched a million memes (and nightmares). With Squid Game now clocking over 2 […]

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Meet Reagan To: Actress, Content Creator, Dance Champion, and the Rising Star Behind One of TV’s Most Iconic Voices

If you’ve ever heard a spine-chilling “Red Light… Green Light” you’ve already met Reagan To, the voice behind the Squid Game doll that launched a million memes (and nightmares).

With Squid Game now clocking over 2 billion hours watched and more than 330 million viewers, Reagan’s viral role in Netflix’s biggest series launch ever isn’t just unforgettable, it’s iconic.

Her character’s influence has gone far beyond the screen: Saturday Night Live spoofed her in a sketch, and The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon recently name-dropped her doll alter ego.

With Squid Game: Season 2 already making waves and scoring Golden Globe and Critics Choice Award nominations, Reagan’s star is only rising faster.

But the 11-year-old powerhouse isn’t stopping there..

Beyond the Doll

Reagan also lent her voice to Big Kid Ember in Pixar’s visually stunning and heartwarming film Elemental, which racked up nominations at the Oscars, Golden Globes, BAFTAs, and Critics’ Choice Awards.

She’s made appearances on Young Sheldon and other hit shows, carving out a space in Hollywood that feels entirely her own.

From Viral Clips to Real-Life Glam

On TikTok, Reagan has racked up more than 17 million likes and close to 700K followers. Her Instagram? A cool 400K+.

But what makes her followers stick around isn’t just her voice work or dance moves: it’s her fun, smart, and wildly endearing personality.

She’s funny. She’s stylish. And she knows how to show up.

Just ask the Publicist Guild Awards and the Movieguide Awards, where she stepped on stage as a presenter like a pro.

Global Champion, Real-Life Star

Off-camera, Reagan’s got moves: award-winning ones.

She’s an International Ballroom Champion, U.S. National Ballroom Champion, and U.S. National Latin Champion, training under none other than Shirley and Mark Ballas (yes, from Dancing with the Stars royalty).

She even represented Team USA at the Olympic-organized World DanceSport Games, where she took 2nd place in Ballroom Dance at just 10 years old.

What’s Next?

Between major acting credits, elite dance trophies, and a growing digital empire, Reagan is the definition of a triple threat. Or maybe more like a quadruple one.

With fans, industry eyes, and media buzz all watching what she’ll do next, one thing’s for sure: Reagan To isn’t just “the Squid Game doll voice.”

She’s so much more.

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Olga Roriz Returns to the Stage – and to Herself – in a New Solo That Dances with the World’s Salvation https://mylemonmagazine.com/olga-roriz-returns-to-the-stage-and-to-herself-in-a-new-solo-that-dances-with-the-worlds-salvation/ Tue, 01 Jul 2025 12:58:10 +0000 https://mylemonmagazine.com/?p=27352 Olga Roriz Returns to Solo Performance with “O Salvado” in Porto After twelve years away from solo performances, Olga Roriz, the iconic Portuguese choreographer and dancer, returns to the spotlight with “O Salvado”, a raw and intimate piece where life, memory, and movement collide. The premiere takes place on July 3rd at Teatro Carlos Alberto, […]

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Olga Roriz Returns to Solo Performance with "O Salvado" in Porto

After twelve years away from solo performances, Olga Roriz, the iconic Portuguese choreographer and dancer, returns to the spotlight with “O Salvado”, a raw and intimate piece where life, memory, and movement collide.

The premiere takes place on July 3rd at Teatro Carlos Alberto, in Porto.

Celebrating 70 years of life and 50 years of an extraordinary career in 2025, Roriz steps back into the solo form with the same urgency and grace that’s defined her work for decades.

In O Salvado”, she becomes a castaway of time, sifting through what remains, what’s worth saving, through the language she knows best: dance.

What’s left after seven decades? Olga answers with her body..

“O Salvado” is more than a solo: it’s a personal excavation.

Olga holds on to fragments of the world, mixing past, present, and future into one living performance.

A soundtrack of her favorite songs (and some she’s never heard) floats through the air.

Maybe, in between it all, you’ll catch the sound of her own voice.

Twelve years have passed since “The Rite of Spring”, her last solo.

Back in 2015, during a performance at Teatro São João, she promised she’d never stop dancing, and in 2025, she keeps that promise.

Performance Dates & Book Launch

Produced by Companhia Olga Roriz, in co-production with Teatro Nacional São João, São Luiz Teatro Municipal, Teatro Aveirense, and Cineteatro Louletano, O Salvado” runs from July 3 to 5 at Teatro Carlos Alberto.

  • Thursday & Saturday: 7:00 PM

  • Friday: 9:00 PM

On Saturday, July 5 at 4:00 PM, the TNSJ will also host the launch of “Topologia do Tempo”, a book by Olga Roriz published by her own company.

The event takes place in the Glass Room at Teatro Carlos Alberto, featuring a conversation between Olga and Pedro Sobrado, President of the Board of TNSJ.

The post Olga Roriz Returns to the Stage – and to Herself – in a New Solo That Dances with the World’s Salvation appeared first on My Lemon Magazine.

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Patagonia’s “Disaster Style”: A Wild New Film Series on Parenting in the Backcountry https://mylemonmagazine.com/patagonias-disaster-style-a-wild-new-film-series-on-parenting-in-the-backcountry/ Fri, 20 Jun 2025 13:02:19 +0000 https://mylemonmagazine.com/?p=27047 Follow elite mountain guide Zoe Hart as she balances steep lines with toddler tantrums and shows us what true grit really means. Patagonia’s latest short‑film series, Disaster Style, premieres this week, taking viewers on an unvarnished journey into the high‑alpine lives of climber Zoe Hart, her husband Max, and their two young boys, Mika and […]

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Follow elite mountain guide Zoe Hart as she balances steep lines with toddler tantrums and shows us what true grit really means.

Patagonia’s latest short‑film series, Disaster Style, premieres this week, taking viewers on an unvarnished journey into the high‑alpine lives of climber Zoe Hart, her husband Max, and their two young boys, Mika and Mathias.

Shot across the peaks of Italy and France, each episode blends adrenaline‑fueled backcountry skiing and coastal crag climbs with the everyday chaos, and joy, of raising a family in the wild.

“If you push your kids past what they think is possible – whether it’s being cold, tired, or wet – they’ll learn they have the capacity to do way more than they thought they could”

says Zoe, one of the few women in the world to hold the prestigious IFMGA mountain‑guide certification.

From dawn patrol ski traverses to quiet afternoons tending a home garden, Disaster Style celebrates parenting that embraces dirt, discomfort, and the unexpected.

Zoe and Max – veterans of steep lines and remote summits – now navigate a new frontier: sharing their passion for the mountains with their littlest partners in crime.

“I feel my best in real moments in nature – with real consequences and real rewards. I want my kids to gravitate toward those experiences because I believe they’ll make them happy and shape them into good people with strong values and solid priorities” Zoe adds.

Directed by Pierre Cadot of Yucca Films – renowned for his raw, authentic mountain storytelling – the series launches on YouTube today, with new episodes on 25 June and 2 July.

About Zoe Hart

An East Coast native turned Chamonix local for over two decades, Zoe has climbed the world’s toughest alpine routes, guided expeditions as an IFMGA‑certified professional, and lent her voice to environmental causes – from Paris 2024’s Olympic events to grassroots mountain‑culture initiatives.

Her passion for storytelling fuels every ski line and every bedtime story in her family’s epic tale.

About Pierre Cadot & Yucca Films

With 10+ years of capturing mountain culture, Pierre Cadot co‑founded Yucca Films in the Chamonix Valley to shine a light on athletic feats and human stories alike.

A skier and mountaineer himself, Cadot’s award‑winning work honors the raw authenticity of his subjects, letting the landscape – and the people who love it – speak for themselves.

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Zero Waste Family: Reducing Your Ecological Footprint for a Better World https://mylemonmagazine.com/zero-waste-family-reducing-your-ecological-footprint-for-a-better-world/ Fri, 14 Mar 2025 13:59:26 +0000 https://mylemonmagazine.com/?p=21679 First Steps for Families to Embrace Sustainable Living and Minimize Environmental Impact Have you ever wondered if it’s possible to live without plastic? Or what’s the best way to reduce your family’s waste? Fredrika Syren and her family show us that it is possible to make a difference, one step at a time, through their […]

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First Steps for Families to Embrace Sustainable Living and Minimize Environmental Impact

Have you ever wondered if it’s possible to live without plastic? Or what’s the best way to reduce your family’s waste? Fredrika Syren and her family show us that it is possible to make a difference, one step at a time, through their Zero Waste Family page.

She gave us some tips on how we can do the same.

Climate change is a big problem, and we should all do something to help.

Sometimes even the smallest change is a step in the right direction. The Zero Waste Family is the project of Fredrika Syren and James, both 53, and their children Isabella, 16, Noah, 12, and Liam, 11.

They started small, but now live a life where waste and plastic are kept to a minimum.

This journey started with Fredrika, the cool mum behind the project, who is also a public speaker and author of the book “A Practical Guide to Zero Waste for Families”.

She grew up in Sweden in a family that loved nature and believed that money should be spent on experiences, not “stuff”.

This was the starting point for a career focused on the planet.

Fredrika has now been an environment writer for over 20 years – things really took off when she became a mum, and the zero-waste lifestyle became normal for this family of five.

” When I became a mother for the first time in 2006, I realised that climate change was going to be the biggest threat to my children and that as a family we were certainly producing more waste than ever. Individual action is the missing piece of the puzzle that is needed alongside government and business action to tackle climate change. This inspired me to learn more about how we could start to reduce our own waste and we started slowly but steadily to reduce one piece of waste at a time “

says Fredrika.

The first step was to change the way they shopped as a family – they started buying fruit and vegetables from the local farmers’ market, buying stable foods in bulk, and bringing their own shopping bags and glass jars to avoid plastic.

Since going zero waste, the family has made a number of changes.

“We eat more at home and grow more of our own food. We have worked hard to reduce food waste by storing food properly, cleaning our fridge, pantry and freezer often and having one leftover day a week. We have started composting and this, along with reducing our food waste, has reduced our rubbish by a third.”

The journey to cut down on the use of plastic

Reducing the use of plastic was a natural part of the Zero Waste Family‘s journey, but it was eight years ago that they decided to get serious about giving up completely.

“It’s turning out to be harder than I first thought”

Fredrika begins.

“We’re not quite there yet, but I’d say we’re 85% plastic-free. The rest we send to Terracycle [a recycling company in the United States] to be upcycled.”

The hardest changes have been in children’s toys, school supplies, clothes, and arts and crafts, as they are often made with plastic and chemicals and are usually packaged in plastic; this mother also says that it is impossible to avoid plastic in vitamins and medicines.

Plastic pollution is a major problem, endangering wildlife and the environment, as most of it is never recycled and ends up in landfill.

For this reason, Fredrika firmly believes that we need to work on reducing our use of plastic.

“This does not mean that you can be perfect and 100% plastic free. But we must at least try.”

How to involve kids in the zero-waste lifestyle

Being Zero Waste is not just for parents.

It’s important to get children involved, and sometimes that’s not the easiest thing to do.

Fredrika, a mother of three, thinks it’s a good idea to make it a family activity.

” I read a lot of books with them when they were younger about recycling and how to be eco-friendly, and we also spend a lot of time in nature and in our garden growing food “

So the best advice she can give is to learn together, as a family, by watching documentaries or reading books.

She also believes that a good way to get children more involved in a zero-waste life is to find original ways to reduce waste together.

“If we cannot reuse, recycle or compost it, we will refuse it”

For Fredrika and the Zero Waste family, the most important rule of sustainable living is:

“If we cannot reuse, recycle or compost it, we refuse it.”

And this is what they try to teach the people around them.

The aim is to ” inspire people in our community, our school and our family to start reducing their own waste simply by inviting them into our lives and making sure we inspire by example without judgement “.

The problem with climate change is that it sometimes feels like our individual impact is almost nil, and Fredrika understands.

” I understand that it can seem so insignificant what one person does. Dismissing the importance of individual responsibility has become a popular argument for doing nothing about climate change “

she begins, adding that

“in a world of more than 7.7 billion people, individual action is still an important part of the equation.”

Fredrika believes that it is our actions as consumers that can make a difference.

“If we as consumers vote with our wallets and choose to buy only from sustainable brands, companies will have to start making sustainable changes to maintain demand and continue to make a profit. The fashion industry is a great example of this. 15 years ago, when my family began our journey towards a zero waste lifestyle, there were almost no sustainable clothing brands on the market. Today, many consumers are aware of the environmental damage caused by the fast fashion industry. Before they decide to buy a product, they often research how it was designed or produced.”

If you are trying to make a difference to start reducing your carbon footprint, Fredrika has some advice for you:

“Take it one step at a time and remember that big starts small.”

She tells us that a good place to start is by doing a waste audit and trying to find a substitute for something in your rubbish.

“It can be as simple as replacing paper towels with cloth, bringing your own bags to the shops or choosing pasta in a box instead of a plastic bag.”

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