Mica Argañaraz

Mica Argañaraz (born 16 May 1992) is an Argentine fashion model and artist.[3] She is best known for being a Prada muse and has been referred to as an it girl and "fashion force to be reckoned with."[4][5][6][7] She is currently ranked as an Industry Icon by models.com.[8]

Mica Argañaraz
Argañaraz in 2019
Born (1992-05-16) 16 May 1992
NationalityArgentine
OccupationModel
Years active2013present
Modeling information
Height1.78 m (5 ft 10 in)[1]
Hair colorBrown
Eye colorBrown
AgencyDNA Model Management (New York)
VIVA Model Management (Paris, London, Barcelona)
Why Not Model Management (Milan)
LO Management (Buenos Aires) [2]

Career

Argañaraz started her career in 2012, walking for Christopher Kane and appearing in the Spanish and Italian editions of Glamour and Elle respectively.[9][10][11]

She has been on the cover of British Vogue,[12] Vogue Italia,[13] Vogue Brasil, Vogue Japan, Vogue China, Vogue Paris, Vogue Germany and Vogue Russia.

In advertising campaigns, she has modeled for Michael Kors, Versace, Louis Vuitton, Tom Ford, Calvin Klein, Yves Saint Laurent, Chanel, Mango, Alexander McQueen, H&M, and Givenchy.[14][15][16]

On the runway, she has walked for designers including Lacoste, Michael Kors, Valentino,[17] Fendi,[18] Alexander Wang, Dries Van Noten, Altuzarra, Jason Wu, Stella McCartney, Hugo Boss, Tom Ford, Chanel, Dior and Louis Vuitton.[19][20][21] In April 2018, Argañaraz graced the inaugural cover of L'Officiel in her native Argentina.

Personal life

Argañaraz is a painter, plays the guitar, and practices meditation.[22][23]

gollark: No generics, reliance on compiler magic, utterly horrific versioning, ugly syntax, multiple returns instead of ADTs/tuples.
gollark: What if you implement Go in Go?
gollark: \@everyone
gollark: Go(lang) = bad.
gollark: ``` [...] MIPS is short for Millions of Instructions Per Second. It is a measure for the computation speed of a processor. Like most such measures, it is more often abused than used properly (it is very difficult to justly compare MIPS for different kinds of computers). BogoMips are Linus's own invention. The linux kernel version 0.99.11 (dated 11 July 1993) needed a timing loop (the time is too short and/or needs to be too exact for a non-busy-loop method of waiting), which must be calibrated to the processor speed of the machine. Hence, the kernel measures at boot time how fast a certain kind of busy loop runs on a computer. "Bogo" comes from "bogus", i.e, something which is a fake. Hence, the BogoMips value gives some indication of the processor speed, but it is way too unscientific to be called anything but BogoMips. The reasons (there are two) it is printed during boot-up is that a) it is slightly useful for debugging and for checking that the computer[’]s caches and turbo button work, and b) Linus loves to chuckle when he sees confused people on the news. [...]```I was wondering what BogoMIPS was, and wikipedia had this.

References

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