I wasn't a model that loved food. I was someone that loved food that started modeling.

I have always had a career, be it modeling, reality TV, or even my not-so-great films.

I have always found photography magical, and became more taken with it whilst modeling.

I never had only one job. I was either playing ball or writing or doing TV or modeling.

In ten years of modeling, I've trained myself to relax and be able to use my upper body.

Fortunately, most human behavior is learned observationally through modeling from others.

I've been modeling since 2012, when I was 18, so I am used to following a crazy schedule.

I was a bit of a tomboy when I started modeling. And I've always felt athletic and strong.

While in Paris, I got into modeling - photographers would literally stop me on the street.

Modeling is always something I've really admired because I've seen my mum and sister do it.

I stopped modeling so I could go to drama school at the William Esper Studio. It's Meisner.

By 17, I was modeling and had bought myself a flat. I've always tried to be self-sufficient.

I love modeling because I get to see everything that inspires me. Then I go home and sketch.

I've always felt like I have a lot to say, and I wasn't communicating that through modeling.

I almost had to exhaust myself at modeling before I could say, 'O.K., I'm ready for school.'

I don't leave home to go help other people live if I'm not modeling that in our home setting.

We'd make love. Afterwards he would take photographs of me. (On modeling for Alfred Stieglitz)

I was an only child, and my mom threw me into some modeling classes to get me out of my shell.

Modeling was very difficult. It's obviously a lot about appearances - it's everything, really.

At thirteen I began modeling, doing my first television commercial in ninth grade for Pizza Hut.

Modeling and pageants help me overcome feeling insecure about the way that I look and my height.

My love for cricket, body-building and martial arts later helped me in modeling and then acting.

Unfortunately, modeling takes you with no transition from being a girl to being a business woman.

When I was a little girl, I lived for modeling and fashion - I used to love, love, love modeling.

I put my money in the bank: I have to think of life after modeling, when I'm not famous any more.

Modeling is not a passion of mine. I have been having fun with it, but it's just to pay the bills.

When I started modeling, I didn't feel like I had a big sister to tell me how this industry works.

And anyway, modeling wasn't for me. I'm too short. I've got a big butt. It wasn't going to happen.

I want to open businesses, invest in different things, and put more time into modeling and acting.

Luckily, I'm doing other things besides just modeling, because frankly, I'm a little bored with it.

I hated modeling. I was so scared. But as soon as I started doing jewelry, I did better as a model.

I will continue modeling until they don't want me anymore basically because I do love it very much.

At 14, I was modeling, which helped me come out of my shell, but I always dreamed of theater school.

If I tried to start modeling right now, I wouldn't be a supermodel because it's all about celebrity.

Modeling wasn't necessarily what I was into. It's something that you're genetically qualified to do.

I never went to a modeling school, and I don't suggest to anybody that they go to a modeling school.

In modeling you rarely get the opportunity to learn a new skill for a project and I love a challenge.

For modeling, you have to be photogenic, but to be a VJ, you actually project your whole personality.

Modeling and my films in the South helped groom me for Bollywood and I had the confidence it required.

I always knew I'd go back to school. Modeling was a means to an end, making money for graduate school.

I kind of look at my modeling career and the Hitchcock years as stepping stones to what I'm doing now.

The whole time I was modeling, I had a place in Paris, and a place in New York, and I was really single.

Because modeling is lucrative, I'm able to save up and be more particular about the acting roles I take.

Basically I was really modeling for fun, but it wasn't ever something that I wanted to do to begin with.

I'd always enjoyed acting, but modeling was so time-consuming - and lucrative - that I didn't pursue it.

The theatre and traveling through my modeling jobs, all of those experiences have helped a lot actually.

I was a tomboy growing up. Even after I started modeling at thirteen, I didn't learn how to do my makeup.

I always said, 'If it's over, it's over.' If modeling is over, it's still the best experience of my life.

Modeling teaches you to be completely conscious of the camera. Acting is being totally unconscious of it.

I had been taking acting classes on and off while I was modeling, so I always had a dream to be in a film.

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