These are the glamour grandmas you need to follow on Instagram

The subversive cadre of women aged over 60 prove that “old” is not what it used to be

Ruth La Ferla
Sunday 01 July 2018 14:01 BST
Comments
Lyn Slate­r, 64, a university professor in New York has legions of young fans as @iconacci­denta­l on Insta­gram
Lyn Slate­r, 64, a university professor in New York has legions of young fans as @iconacci­denta­l on Insta­gram (Rex)

Photographed with a hip thrust forward to show off her Margiela apron dress and modishly frayed jeans, Lyn Slater projects a kind of swagger pretty rare among her peers.

A professor at Fordham University in New York, with hyper-chic side gigs as a model and blogger, she is known to a wider public as an Instagram idol.

Sure, she is 64, a time when some women her age are feeling pressed to close up shop. But if you are Slater, that is not going to happen.

On Accidental Icon, her influential Instagram account, she tends to vamp in an eyecatching mashup of Comme des Garçons, Yohji Yamamoto and consignment store finds. Her following, hundreds of thousands strong, skews young, she says, and is responsive to her sass.

“I flaunt it,” she said. “I’m not 20. I don’t want to be 20, but I’m really freaking cool. That’s what I think about when I’m posting a photo.”

Her brash voice is one in a chorus of like-minded contemporaries and women in their 70s and 80s, who are taking on matters of ageing with an audacity — and riveting style — their mothers might have envied.


 Lyn Slater is part of what has been dubbed the ‘elastic generation’ 
 (Rex)

Married or single, working or not, and most often grandmothers, they are asserting their presence on Instagram, intent, in the process, on subverting shopworn notions of what “old” looks and feels like. They are, to hear some tell it, “100 percent slaying”.

“These women are ambassadors of age,” says Ari Seth Cohen, creator of Advanced Style, a popular street-style blog, two books and a film documenting, the “fashion and wisdom of the senior set.”

Cohen’s subjects are simultaneously reflecting and contributing to a gradual shift in the common perception of ageing.

“The idea of what these older women look like has changed,” says Cohen. “If they were stylish in their youth, they will still be stylish now. They continue to be who they were.”

That observation was echoed in marketing agency J Walter Thomson’s 2015 report “The Elastic Generation”, a survey of 55- to 72-year-old women in England revisited this year with follow-up report.

JWT set out to cast baby boomers as more happening and “elastic”.

“Our collective understanding of what later life looks like remains woefully outdated,” Marie Stafford, the European director of the JWT Innovation Group, writes in her introduction. “Age no longer dictates the way we live. Physical capacity, financial circumstances and mindset arguably have far greater influence.”

A woman in her fifties, then, “might be a grandmother or a new mother,” the study goes on to say. “She might be an entrepreneur, a wild motorcyclist or a multi-marathon runner. Her lifestyle is not governed by her age but by her values and the things she cares about.”

Some of these women and their counterparts abroad are still subscribing to the counterculture values and maverick stance they adopted in the Sixties and Seventies.

Australian fashion designer Jenny Kee and @jenn­ykeeo­z on Insta­gram (Rex)

“We are not going to be little old ladies sitting in a nursing home with blue-rinsed hair,” said Jenny Kee (@Jennykeeoz), a 71-year-old Australian artist and knitwear designer. “Or if we are going to be in a nursing home, we’ll be there with our marijuana, our health foods and our great sense of style.”

Slater echoed that sentiment. “When I was young, we were burning our bras and promoting free love,” she said. “We were getting high. Why would accept the ageing image of our mothers?”

In their wardrobes, unfettered self-expression is the rule. Dorrie Jacobson, an 83-year-old former Playboy bunny, piqued interest last year when she began modelling lacy black lingerie on her Senior Style Bible Instagram account.

In an interview, as on her feed, she urges followers to ditch cobwebby notions of how a woman her age should dress. “Wear what you like,” she said. “Age-appropriate has nothing to do with it.”

That brand of feistiness likely owes a debt to a few playfully cantankerous online role models, women who call themselves “Insta-grans,” who have made brazenness a virtue.

Making waves, and a little cash on the side, are pop sensations like Baddie Winkle (89-year-old Helen Ruth Elam Van Winkle), whose posts are conceived to flip convention on its head.

Snapped in shrilly colourful knits, skimpy swimwear and, in one instance, a pink message T-shirt that reads, “Be a slut, do whatever you want,” Van Winkle has transcended cult status.

She has millions of followers and is paid to tout brands like Got2B hair products and Smirnoff on her account, and has made personal appearances at Sephora.

Internet personality and Instagram star Helen Ruth Van Winkle is known as 'Baddiewinkle' (Getty) (Getty Images)

There is 69-year-old Lili Hayes, whose posts tend to send up stereotyped images of Jewish mumness. Hayes, who, as her online bio makes clear, is always a little ticked off, underscores her peevishness with a streetwear-inflected style. Her fashion signature: an ever-expanding collection of Supreme caps chalk up their influence to a palpable shift in the wind. Their advent coincides with the stepped-up visibility, and clout, of political outliers like Ruth ader Ginsburg, whose weathered features loom large these days on theatre screens, to say nothing of a voluble coterie of older women in Congress.

Entertainment legends like Cher, the redoubtably glamorous grandma in Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again, which arrives in theatres next month, do their utmost as well to spruce up the image of ageing.

In an apparently more hospitable climate, designers and advertisers have begun to acknowledge a more mature market, pushing a concept of inclusion to extend not just to race and ethnicity but also to age.

Maye Musk, 70, models for Concept Korea and is featured in Harper’s Bazaar; Yasmin Le Bon, in her fifties, strikes poses for Armani; and at 65, Isabella Rossellini, now 65, returned as a face of Lancôme in 2016, 20 years after the beauty brand dropped her.

Even so, those campaigns can carry a whiff of tokenism. According to the Elastic Generation study, women over 50 are still greatly underrepresented in proportion to their spending power.

Also overlooked is their social media savvy. Eschewing stereotypes, 73 percent of the Elastic Generation participants “hate the way their generation is patronised when it comes to technology,” the report says.

Six out of 10 say they find tech “fascinating,” according to the report, and many of those may actually be more competent using tech than their younger counterparts.

What’s more, they have a demonstrable earning capacity, many working well into their sixties and seventies, others reinventing themselves to embrace new forms of entrepreneurship.

Slater, for one, was quick to monetise her account. The Spanish retailer Mango hired her for a 2017 campaign, “A Story of Uniqueness.” She recently appeared in a commercial for CVS Pharmacy, a company she admires for its use of unretouched models of varying ages.

She is featured in a music video with Charlotte Gainsbourg and has been approached by several literary agents to turn her posts into a book, she says.

Maye Musk, 70, is one of many older women who have been snapped up by designers and advertisers (Rex)

On her Instagram account, Kee has joined forces with Romance Was Born, a label led by a team of designers in their early thirties. “I am their guru and mentor,” she says. Together they will present a collection during the couture shows in Paris in July.

And on her account, Silver Is the New Blonde, Jan Correll, 60, a consultant in technology sales, has attracted an assortment of labels, including J Jill and Soma Intimates, a lingerie line. “Marketers know that women my age have the money to spend,” she says.

While they court and may relish a surge in attention, some prominent influencers balk at being profiled. “It’s colonising to be put out there exclusively with women your age,” Slater said. “Every woman should be able to open a magazine and see herself there as part of a mix.”

Sarah-Jane Adams, 63, who turned to Instagram to show off the jewellery she sells, makes no references in her posts to her grey hair. “I don’t feel as if I’m trying to play the old card,” she said. She would rather be judged on the particulars.

“I was a punk,” she said, “and before that I was a hippie. Now I’ve merged the two cultures. I’m part of the Germaine Greer generation. But in the world of social media, I’m simply lumped with all the over-sixties.”

Privacy is a concern as well. “Men reach out all the time,” said Correll, who has been married for 43 years and is a grandmother of four. “Sometimes it scares me. I’m constantly deleting their posts.“

Isabella Rossellini, 65, returned as a face of Lancôme in 2016 – after being dropped 20 years earlier (Rex)

She added: “I decided to use social media as my platform, my little piece of real estate, my outlet for talking about this point in my life where I can do what I want.”

Still, the outcome is more often positive. Posting on Instagram reinforces a sense of solidarity that may have been missing elsewhere in their lives. As Cohen of Advanced Style noted: “Some of these women don’t live in big cities.

For them, Instagram can lead to long-distance friendships, real-life encounters, dinner parties and other events that combat isolation and foster a sense of community.”

That online community encompasses a surprisingly youthful contingent. On Instagram, many of Slater’s followers range in age from 25 to 35. “Young people don’t seem to have the same bias that older people do,” she said.

“They don’t like categories – they deconstruct all these historical groupings like gender. That’s why some of them identify with my posts. The people who support me, follow me, hire me – they’re all young.”

Kee ascribes the enthusiasm of girls in their teens and women in their early twenties to a “wish I’d been there” mentality. Among her special champions, she said, is her 13-year-old granddaughter, an ardent fan of Sixties rock'n'roll, especially the Beatles.

“We lived in extraordinary times,” Kee said of the period when she came of age.

“These girls know that, they know what we lived through. They envy us.”

© New York Times

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in