Fashion should be stylish and fun.

I used to be a thing; I'm a person now.

I was a very, very shy, insecure teenager.

You can't be a clothes hanger for your entire life.

Jamie Oliver's books are the best. I love Jamie. Bless him!

[On her thinness:] It's not what you'd call a figure, is it?

If you just say nothing, there is no way they can make you talk.

My weakness is chocolate - especially butterscotch and nut varieties.

I want to continue to try and break the barrier between male and female.

Confusion is the best form of communication. It's left to be unexplained.

For special occasions, I love pretty dresses - but nothing too frou-frou!

The sixties were a time when ordinary people could do extraordinary things . . . !

The key with a full-skirt shape is to balance it out with a great figure-hugging top.

Being a grown-up woman doesn't mean you can't look beautiful, individual and different.

There's no need to dress like everyone else. It's much more fun to create your own look.

I’m just mad for San Francisco. It is like London and Paris stacked on top of each other.

We all have bits that we don't like, but you don't have to be a size 10 to look wonderful.

I love flat shoes, more so than heels. One of my obsessions is men's co-respondent lace-ups.

I ate like a horse when I was younger, and not very sensibly, though no one ever believes that.

I eat healthily because that's the way I prefer to eat, and I'm sure it helps keep the weight off.

Back in the '60s, there was a car sticker that read, 'Forget Oxfam, Feed Twiggy,' but I ate like a horse.

I was very skinny, but that was just my natural build. I always ate sensibly - being thin was in my genes.

My relationship with M&S continues to be an exciting journey, from modelling to designing my online range.

It's hard to see how anyone can fail to care about innocent children and animals being blown up by landmines.

M&S clothes just get better and better, year after year. I'm always begging for stuff from every shoot we do.

I like to get on with people. I don't go around being nasty, but if someone crosses me, I can be horrible back.

Yes, black is slimming, but it's not always youthful. The right tone of red, however, is flattering on all women.

I'd love there to be more larger models, but it's just not going to happen. Designers love to design for slim girls.

Always be natural. Putting on airs will make a giggle out of you. Be yourself and if you don't know something say so.

I love Kate Moss. I've worked with her a couple of times, and she is a great girl, really funny and easy to work with.

I was very, very underdeveloped for my age, I hated what I looked like, so I thought everyone had gone stark raving mad.

I am very sad that some designers are still using real fur when the fake alternatives are so effective and so easily obtainable.

I've always loved life, and I've never known what's ahead. I love not knowing what might be round the corner. I love serendipity.

Can you imagine wot it was like. All the girls gettin' luvly figgers and me stayin' flat as a pancake? It was no fun, I tell you.

I don't like it when people say, 'You're 45, so you should be wearing X and never Y.' For me, dressing is about attitude, not age.

It is no longer acceptable to ignore the suffering, and designers must take responsibility for the way that their fur is produced.

I didn't really know about Marilyn Manson - it's not my sort of music, not exactly the sort of thing I would curl up and listen to!

You won't often find me in a pair of killer heels: my heel height doesn't rise above two and a half inches, as I would just fall over!

I don't understand people getting depressed about getting older. There is nothing you can do about it, so you might as well embrace it.

Ageing doesn't mean giving up on style and individuality; it doesn't mean abandoning fashion and living in comfy slippers and flannel knickers.

Tailored jackets with jeans is a great look for all ages. Dress up with a heel and pretty shirt, or just wear a smart T-shirt under the jacket.

As every teenage girl, I was absolutely obsessed with The Beatles, and the first record I bought was 'Please Please Me.' I'd have been 13 at the time.

At sixteen, I was a funny, skinny little thing, all eyelashes and legs. And then, suddenly people told me it was gorgeous. I thought they had gone mad.

I'm grateful for my lines of wisdom. Of course, there are days when I think: 'Oh my gawd, I look a bit tired.' But I can pull it together if I have to.

I love exercise but I find it boring doing the same thing all the time, so I fluctuate between going to the gym, doing Pilates and taking dance lessons.

I love exercise, but I find it boring doing the same thing all the time, so I fluctuate between going to the gym, doing Pilates, and taking dance lessons.

My golden rules for looking good are to moisturise to ridiculousness with a really rich moisturiser. And I always take my make-up off before going to bed.

Fluted sleeves or any sleeve that flares out before coming in again at the wrist are very feminine and a great way to distract from the dreaded 'bingo wings.'

The trick is to find the style that is right for you. When it comes to trying new clothes, my advice is not to take it too seriously - it's all about having fun.

I love corduroy jeans as well as vertical-striped jeans. Both are a fun switch from plain old denim. They can be slimming so long as the stripes aren't too chunky.

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