Minimal Space, Maximum Presence
This Interview Magazine Germany editorial understands a very specific truth. When the subject has real presence, you strip everything else away. Shot in black and white by Benjamin Alexander Huseby, the June 2015 story starring Binx Walton is refreshingly focused, calm, and confident.
No distractions. No noise. Just beauty and attitude doing the work.
A Setting That Knows Its Place
The shoot unfolds inside a chic, minimal apartment building that feels more like a frame than a location. Clean lines, quiet corners, and architectural restraint allow the images to breathe.
The space never competes with Binx. It simply holds her. Walls, windows, and floors become neutral witnesses to her presence. The setting feels intentional but invisible, which is exactly the point.
This is environment as support system.
Black and White, With Purpose
The choice to shoot in black and white sharpens everything. Texture, bone structure, expression. Nothing hides behind color or styling tricks. The images feel honest and direct.
Black and white photography has a way of demanding commitment. If the subject cannot carry the frame, it shows immediately. Binx carries it effortlessly.
Every look feels resolved. Every angle feels deliberate.
Binx Walton, Undiluted
Binx Walton thrives in this stripped back environment. Her beauty is striking, but it is her composure that holds attention. There is confidence in her stillness. A sense of knowing exactly how little she needs to give.
She does not over perform. She does not soften herself. She simply exists in the space and lets the camera meet her where she stands.
That restraint is powerful.
Styling That Steps Aside
Styled by Jodie Barnes, the looks stay clean and unfussy. Nothing pulls focus. Everything supports the central idea.
Hair by Kei Terada is equally restrained, reinforcing the editorial’s quiet confidence. The beauty feels natural, but never careless.
This is styling that understands when to stop.
Huseby’s Controlled Gaze
Benjamin Alexander Huseby photographs with precision and trust. The compositions feel balanced and calm, never pushing for drama. The camera observes rather than demands.
That control allows the subject to lead. The images feel collaborative rather than imposed.
It is confidence behind the lens matching confidence in front of it.
Why It Works
This editorial succeeds because it commits to focus. Minimal setting. Minimal styling. Maximum attention on the subject.
Nothing feels excessive. Nothing feels unresolved.
Final Take
Binx Walton by Benjamin Alexander Huseby for Interview Magazine Germany June 2015 is a masterclass in restraint. Shot in black and white within a minimal architectural space, the editorial lets beauty, presence, and quiet confidence take center stage. Proof that sometimes the strongest statement is knowing when to subtract.
Credits
Publication: Interview Magazine Germany
Issue: June 2015
Model: Binx Walton
Photographer: Benjamin Alexander Huseby
Fashion Editor: Jodie Barnes
Hair: Kei Terada
Category: Fashion Editorial

Publication: Interview Magazine Germany June 2015
Model: Binx Walton
Photographer: Benjamin Alexander Huseby
Fashion Editor: Jodie Barnes
Hair: Kei Terada


