@SceneStyled: R!SKY BOYS GET [PERSONA]L FT. DONA EMAM | @SCENESTYLED #COVER 2.0 Cairo’s streets do not sit still. They seethe, they sprawl, they double back on themselves, shifting with the weight of bodies and histories layered thick as dust. It is within this choreography that The Risky Boys move – a trio of 22-year-old Egyptian creatives and models who have made the city’s alleys their runway and stage. But The Risky Boys – Ahmed Attef, Karim Alaa, and Mohamed Tarek – are not the product of the global fashion zeitgeist. They did not emerge from ateliers or academies. They collided, as things often do in Cairo, at the peripheries of modeling shoots. They are not here to unsettle haute couture from within but to confront its boundaries entirely. Their catwalks are neither cordoned nor ticketed; they are carved into the butcher shops, the souks, the tight and teeming alleyways of Banha and Al Mattariya, the places that made them. If fashion is an industry that speaks in dictates – seasonal edits, trends filtered through the same polished lens – then The Risky Boys force it to see something else. To look closer. This February the Risky Boys teamed up with #SceneStyled and rising Egyptian actress Dona Emam on their second installation of ‘Persona’; an intimate series they conceived as stylists and art directors and a project that strips away the expectations of public life to ask a single, unvarnished question: Who would you be if social conventions did not exist? For the full #CoverStory, head to www.SceneStyled.com or download the #SceneNow app (available on iOS and Android). Produced by: @scenestyled @mo4network SceneStyled Managing Editor: @faridaelshafie Creative Direction & Costume Design: @riskyboyss_ Creative Producer: @lordmunky Photography: @fariszaitoon DOP: @visionary_xx Editorial Design: @habibamr1 Talent: @dona_emam Makeup: @makeuppbyssara Hair: @alsagheersalons Set Design: @maria__saba Agency Producer: @heshambaghdady Gaffer: @ahmedgamal2143 @jimmys.light 2nd Camera & Sound: @eslam.ahmed.18400 1st AC: @mahmoud.gehad.217 Lighting Technician: @mazen_moohamedd Video Editor: @mariamraymone
@SceneStyled: R!SKY BOYS GET [PERSONA]L FT. DONA EMAM | @SCENESTYLED #COVER 2.0 Cairo’s streets do not sit still. They seethe, they sprawl, they double back on themselves, shifting with the weight of bodies and histories layered thick as dust. It is within this choreography that The Risky Boys move – a trio of 22-year-old Egyptian creatives and models who have made the city’s alleys their runway and stage. But The Risky Boys – Ahmed Attef, Karim Alaa, and Mohamed Tarek – are not the product of the global fashion zeitgeist. They did not emerge from ateliers or academies. They collided, as things often do in Cairo, at the peripheries of modeling shoots. They are not here to unsettle haute couture from within but to confront its boundaries entirely. Their catwalks are neither cordoned nor ticketed; they are carved into the butcher shops, the souks, the tight and teeming alleyways of Banha and Al Mattariya, the places that made them. If fashion is an industry that speaks in dictates – seasonal edits, trends filtered through the same polished lens – then The Risky Boys force it to see something else. To look closer. This February the Risky Boys teamed up with #SceneStyled and rising Egyptian actress Dona Emam on their second installation of ‘Persona’; an intimate series they conceived as stylists and art directors and a project that strips away the expectations of public life to ask a single, unvarnished question: Who would you be if social conventions did not exist? For the full #CoverStory, head to www.SceneStyled.com or download the #SceneNow app (available on iOS and Android). Produced by: @scenestyled @mo4network SceneStyled Managing Editor: @faridaelshafie Creative Direction & Costume Design: @riskyboyss_ Creative Producer: @lordmunky Photography: @fariszaitoon DOP: @visionary_xx Editorial Design: @habibamr1 Talent: @dona_emam Makeup: @makeuppbyssara Hair: @alsagheersalons Set Design: @maria__saba Agency Producer: @heshambaghdady Gaffer: @ahmedgamal2143 @jimmys.light 2nd Camera & Sound: @eslam.ahmed.18400 1st AC: @mahmoud.gehad.217 Lighting Technician: @mazen_moohamedd Video Editor: @mariamraymone
@SceneStyled: R!SKY BOYS GET [PERSONA]L FT. DONA EMAM | @SCENESTYLED #COVER 2.0 Cairo’s streets do not sit still. They seethe, they sprawl, they double back on themselves, shifting with the weight of bodies and histories layered thick as dust. It is within this choreography that The Risky Boys move – a trio of 22-year-old Egyptian creatives and models who have made the city’s alleys their runway and stage. But The Risky Boys – Ahmed Attef, Karim Alaa, and Mohamed Tarek – are not the product of the global fashion zeitgeist. They did not emerge from ateliers or academies. They collided, as things often do in Cairo, at the peripheries of modeling shoots. They are not here to unsettle haute couture from within but to confront its boundaries entirely. Their catwalks are neither cordoned nor ticketed; they are carved into the butcher shops, the souks, the tight and teeming alleyways of Banha and Al Mattariya, the places that made them. If fashion is an industry that speaks in dictates – seasonal edits, trends filtered through the same polished lens – then The Risky Boys force it to see something else. To look closer. This February the Risky Boys teamed up with #SceneStyled and rising Egyptian actress Dona Emam on their second installation of ‘Persona’; an intimate series they conceived as stylists and art directors and a project that strips away the expectations of public life to ask a single, unvarnished question: Who would you be if social conventions did not exist? For the full #CoverStory, head to www.SceneStyled.com or download the #SceneNow app (available on iOS and Android). Produced by: @scenestyled @mo4network SceneStyled Managing Editor: @faridaelshafie Creative Direction & Costume Design: @riskyboyss_ Creative Producer: @lordmunky Photography: @fariszaitoon DOP: @visionary_xx Editorial Design: @habibamr1 Talent: @dona_emam Makeup: @makeuppbyssara Hair: @alsagheersalons Set Design: @maria__saba Agency Producer: @heshambaghdady Gaffer: @ahmedgamal2143 @jimmys.light 2nd Camera & Sound: @eslam.ahmed.18400 1st AC: @mahmoud.gehad.217 Lighting Technician: @mazen_moohamedd Video Editor: @mariamraymone
@SceneStyled: R!SKY BOYS GET [PERSONA]L FT. DONA EMAM | @SCENESTYLED #COVER 2.0 Cairo’s streets do not sit still. They seethe, they sprawl, they double back on themselves, shifting with the weight of bodies and histories layered thick as dust. It is within this choreography that The Risky Boys move – a trio of 22-year-old Egyptian creatives and models who have made the city’s alleys their runway and stage. But The Risky Boys – Ahmed Attef, Karim Alaa, and Mohamed Tarek – are not the product of the global fashion zeitgeist. They did not emerge from ateliers or academies. They collided, as things often do in Cairo, at the peripheries of modeling shoots. They are not here to unsettle haute couture from within but to confront its boundaries entirely. Their catwalks are neither cordoned nor ticketed; they are carved into the butcher shops, the souks, the tight and teeming alleyways of Banha and Al Mattariya, the places that made them. If fashion is an industry that speaks in dictates – seasonal edits, trends filtered through the same polished lens – then The Risky Boys force it to see something else. To look closer. This February the Risky Boys teamed up with #SceneStyled and rising Egyptian actress Dona Emam on their second installation of ‘Persona’; an intimate series they conceived as stylists and art directors and a project that strips away the expectations of public life to ask a single, unvarnished question: Who would you be if social conventions did not exist? For the full #CoverStory, head to www.SceneStyled.com or download the #SceneNow app (available on iOS and Android). Produced by: @scenestyled @mo4network SceneStyled Managing Editor: @faridaelshafie Creative Direction & Costume Design: @riskyboyss_ Creative Producer: @lordmunky Photography: @fariszaitoon DOP: @visionary_xx Editorial Design: @habibamr1 Talent: @dona_emam Makeup: @makeuppbyssara Hair: @alsagheersalons Set Design: @maria__saba Agency Producer: @heshambaghdady Gaffer: @ahmedgamal2143 @jimmys.light 2nd Camera & Sound: @eslam.ahmed.18400 1st AC: @mahmoud.gehad.217 Lighting Technician: @mazen_moohamedd Video Editor: @mariamraymone
@SceneStyled: R!SKY BOYS GET [PERSONA]L FT. DONA EMAM | @SCENESTYLED #COVER 2.0 Cairo’s streets do not sit still. They seethe, they sprawl, they double back on themselves, shifting with the weight of bodies and histories layered thick as dust. It is within this choreography that The Risky Boys move – a trio of 22-year-old Egyptian creatives and models who have made the city’s alleys their runway and stage. But The Risky Boys – Ahmed Attef, Karim Alaa, and Mohamed Tarek – are not the product of the global fashion zeitgeist. They did not emerge from ateliers or academies. They collided, as things often do in Cairo, at the peripheries of modeling shoots. They are not here to unsettle haute couture from within but to confront its boundaries entirely. Their catwalks are neither cordoned nor ticketed; they are carved into the butcher shops, the souks, the tight and teeming alleyways of Banha and Al Mattariya, the places that made them. If fashion is an industry that speaks in dictates – seasonal edits, trends filtered through the same polished lens – then The Risky Boys force it to see something else. To look closer. This February the Risky Boys teamed up with #SceneStyled and rising Egyptian actress Dona Emam on their second installation of ‘Persona’; an intimate series they conceived as stylists and art directors and a project that strips away the expectations of public life to ask a single, unvarnished question: Who would you be if social conventions did not exist? For the full #CoverStory, head to www.SceneStyled.com or download the #SceneNow app (available on iOS and Android). Produced by: @scenestyled @mo4network SceneStyled Managing Editor: @faridaelshafie Creative Direction & Costume Design: @riskyboyss_ Creative Producer: @lordmunky Photography: @fariszaitoon DOP: @visionary_xx Editorial Design: @habibamr1 Talent: @dona_emam Makeup: @makeuppbyssara Hair: @alsagheersalons Set Design: @maria__saba Agency Producer: @heshambaghdady Gaffer: @ahmedgamal2143 @jimmys.light 2nd Camera & Sound: @eslam.ahmed.18400 1st AC: @mahmoud.gehad.217 Lighting Technician: @mazen_moohamedd Video Editor: @mariamraymone
@SceneStyled: R!SKY BOYS GET [PERSONA]L FT. DONA EMAM | @SCENESTYLED #COVER 2.0 Cairo’s streets do not sit still. They seethe, they sprawl, they double back on themselves, shifting with the weight of bodies and histories layered thick as dust. It is within this choreography that The Risky Boys move – a trio of 22-year-old Egyptian creatives and models who have made the city’s alleys their runway and stage. But The Risky Boys – Ahmed Attef, Karim Alaa, and Mohamed Tarek – are not the product of the global fashion zeitgeist. They did not emerge from ateliers or academies. They collided, as things often do in Cairo, at the peripheries of modeling shoots. They are not here to unsettle haute couture from within but to confront its boundaries entirely. Their catwalks are neither cordoned nor ticketed; they are carved into the butcher shops, the souks, the tight and teeming alleyways of Banha and Al Mattariya, the places that made them. If fashion is an industry that speaks in dictates – seasonal edits, trends filtered through the same polished lens – then The Risky Boys force it to see something else. To look closer. This February the Risky Boys teamed up with #SceneStyled and rising Egyptian actress Dona Emam on their second installation of ‘Persona’; an intimate series they conceived as stylists and art directors and a project that strips away the expectations of public life to ask a single, unvarnished question: Who would you be if social conventions did not exist? For the full #CoverStory, head to www.SceneStyled.com or download the #SceneNow app (available on iOS and Android). Produced by: @scenestyled @mo4network SceneStyled Managing Editor: @faridaelshafie Creative Direction & Costume Design: @riskyboyss_ Creative Producer: @lordmunky Photography: @fariszaitoon DOP: @visionary_xx Editorial Design: @habibamr1 Talent: @dona_emam Makeup: @makeuppbyssara Hair: @alsagheersalons Set Design: @maria__saba Agency Producer: @heshambaghdady Gaffer: @ahmedgamal2143 @jimmys.light 2nd Camera & Sound: @eslam.ahmed.18400 1st AC: @mahmoud.gehad.217 Lighting Technician: @mazen_moohamedd Video Editor: @mariamraymone
@SceneStyled: R!SKY BOYS GET [PERSONA]L FT. DONA EMAM | @SCENESTYLED #COVER 2.0 Cairo’s streets do not sit still. They seethe, they sprawl, they double back on themselves, shifting with the weight of bodies and histories layered thick as dust. It is within this choreography that The Risky Boys move – a trio of 22-year-old Egyptian creatives and models who have made the city’s alleys their runway and stage. But The Risky Boys – Ahmed Attef, Karim Alaa, and Mohamed Tarek – are not the product of the global fashion zeitgeist. They did not emerge from ateliers or academies. They collided, as things often do in Cairo, at the peripheries of modeling shoots. They are not here to unsettle haute couture from within but to confront its boundaries entirely. Their catwalks are neither cordoned nor ticketed; they are carved into the butcher shops, the souks, the tight and teeming alleyways of Banha and Al Mattariya, the places that made them. If fashion is an industry that speaks in dictates – seasonal edits, trends filtered through the same polished lens – then The Risky Boys force it to see something else. To look closer. This February the Risky Boys teamed up with #SceneStyled and rising Egyptian actress Dona Emam on their second installation of ‘Persona’; an intimate series they conceived as stylists and art directors and a project that strips away the expectations of public life to ask a single, unvarnished question: Who would you be if social conventions did not exist? For the full #CoverStory, head to www.SceneStyled.com or download the #SceneNow app (available on iOS and Android). Produced by: @scenestyled @mo4network SceneStyled Managing Editor: @faridaelshafie Creative Direction & Costume Design: @riskyboyss_ Creative Producer: @lordmunky Photography: @fariszaitoon DOP: @visionary_xx Editorial Design: @habibamr1 Talent: @dona_emam Makeup: @makeuppbyssara Hair: @alsagheersalons Set Design: @maria__saba Agency Producer: @heshambaghdady Gaffer: @ahmedgamal2143 @jimmys.light 2nd Camera & Sound: @eslam.ahmed.18400 1st AC: @mahmoud.gehad.217 Lighting Technician: @mazen_moohamedd Video Editor: @mariamraymone
@SceneStyled: R!SKY BOYS GET [PERSONA]L FT. DONA EMAM | @SCENESTYLED #COVER 2.0 Cairo’s streets do not sit still. They seethe, they sprawl, they double back on themselves, shifting with the weight of bodies and histories layered thick as dust. It is within this choreography that The Risky Boys move – a trio of 22-year-old Egyptian creatives and models who have made the city’s alleys their runway and stage. But The Risky Boys – Ahmed Attef, Karim Alaa, and Mohamed Tarek – are not the product of the global fashion zeitgeist. They did not emerge from ateliers or academies. They collided, as things often do in Cairo, at the peripheries of modeling shoots. They are not here to unsettle haute couture from within but to confront its boundaries entirely. Their catwalks are neither cordoned nor ticketed; they are carved into the butcher shops, the souks, the tight and teeming alleyways of Banha and Al Mattariya, the places that made them. If fashion is an industry that speaks in dictates – seasonal edits, trends filtered through the same polished lens – then The Risky Boys force it to see something else. To look closer. This February the Risky Boys teamed up with #SceneStyled and rising Egyptian actress Dona Emam on their second installation of ‘Persona’; an intimate series they conceived as stylists and art directors and a project that strips away the expectations of public life to ask a single, unvarnished question: Who would you be if social conventions did not exist? For the full #CoverStory, head to www.SceneStyled.com or download the #SceneNow app (available on iOS and Android). Produced by: @scenestyled @mo4network SceneStyled Managing Editor: @faridaelshafie Creative Direction & Costume Design: @riskyboyss_ Creative Producer: @lordmunky Photography: @fariszaitoon DOP: @visionary_xx Editorial Design: @habibamr1 Talent: @dona_emam Makeup: @makeuppbyssara Hair: @alsagheersalons Set Design: @maria__saba Agency Producer: @heshambaghdady Gaffer: @ahmedgamal2143 @jimmys.light 2nd Camera & Sound: @eslam.ahmed.18400 1st AC: @mahmoud.gehad.217 Lighting Technician: @mazen_moohamedd Video Editor: @mariamraymone
@SceneStyled: R!SKY BOYS GET [PERSONA]L FT. DONA EMAM | @SCENESTYLED #COVER 2.0 Cairo’s streets do not sit still. They seethe, they sprawl, they double back on themselves, shifting with the weight of bodies and histories layered thick as dust. It is within this choreography that The Risky Boys move – a trio of 22-year-old Egyptian creatives and models who have made the city’s alleys their runway and stage. But The Risky Boys – Ahmed Attef, Karim Alaa, and Mohamed Tarek – are not the product of the global fashion zeitgeist. They did not emerge from ateliers or academies. They collided, as things often do in Cairo, at the peripheries of modeling shoots. They are not here to unsettle haute couture from within but to confront its boundaries entirely. Their catwalks are neither cordoned nor ticketed; they are carved into the butcher shops, the souks, the tight and teeming alleyways of Banha and Al Mattariya, the places that made them. If fashion is an industry that speaks in dictates – seasonal edits, trends filtered through the same polished lens – then The Risky Boys force it to see something else. To look closer. This February the Risky Boys teamed up with #SceneStyled and rising Egyptian actress Dona Emam on their second installation of ‘Persona’; an intimate series they conceived as stylists and art directors and a project that strips away the expectations of public life to ask a single, unvarnished question: Who would you be if social conventions did not exist? For the full #CoverStory, head to www.SceneStyled.com or download the #SceneNow app (available on iOS and Android). Produced by: @scenestyled @mo4network SceneStyled Managing Editor: @faridaelshafie Creative Direction & Costume Design: @riskyboyss_ Creative Producer: @lordmunky Photography: @fariszaitoon DOP: @visionary_xx Editorial Design: @habibamr1 Talent: @dona_emam Makeup: @makeuppbyssara Hair: @alsagheersalons Set Design: @maria__saba Agency Producer: @heshambaghdady Gaffer: @ahmedgamal2143 @jimmys.light 2nd Camera & Sound: @eslam.ahmed.18400 1st AC: @mahmoud.gehad.217 Lighting Technician: @mazen_moohamedd Video Editor: @mariamraymone
@SceneStyled: R!SKY BOYS GET [PERSONA]L FT. DONA EMAM | @SCENESTYLED #COVER 2.0 Cairo’s streets do not sit still. They seethe, they sprawl, they double back on themselves, shifting with the weight of bodies and histories layered thick as dust. It is within this choreography that The Risky Boys move – a trio of 22-year-old Egyptian creatives and models who have made the city’s alleys their runway and stage. But The Risky Boys – Ahmed Attef, Karim Alaa, and Mohamed Tarek – are not the product of the global fashion zeitgeist. They did not emerge from ateliers or academies. They collided, as things often do in Cairo, at the peripheries of modeling shoots. They are not here to unsettle haute couture from within but to confront its boundaries entirely. Their catwalks are neither cordoned nor ticketed; they are carved into the butcher shops, the souks, the tight and teeming alleyways of Banha and Al Mattariya, the places that made them. If fashion is an industry that speaks in dictates – seasonal edits, trends filtered through the same polished lens – then The Risky Boys force it to see something else. To look closer. This February the Risky Boys teamed up with #SceneStyled and rising Egyptian actress Dona Emam on their second installation of ‘Persona’; an intimate series they conceived as stylists and art directors and a project that strips away the expectations of public life to ask a single, unvarnished question: Who would you be if social conventions did not exist? For the full #CoverStory, head to www.SceneStyled.com or download the #SceneNow app (available on iOS and Android). Produced by: @scenestyled @mo4network SceneStyled Managing Editor: @faridaelshafie Creative Direction & Costume Design: @riskyboyss_ Creative Producer: @lordmunky Photography: @fariszaitoon DOP: @visionary_xx Editorial Design: @habibamr1 Talent: @dona_emam Makeup: @makeuppbyssara Hair: @alsagheersalons Set Design: @maria__saba Agency Producer: @heshambaghdady Gaffer: @ahmedgamal2143 @jimmys.light 2nd Camera & Sound: @eslam.ahmed.18400 1st AC: @mahmoud.gehad.217 Lighting Technician: @mazen_moohamedd Video Editor: @mariamraymone
@SceneStyled: R!SKY BOYS GET [PERSONA]L FT. DONA EMAM | @SCENESTYLED #COVER 2.0 Cairo’s streets do not sit still. They seethe, they sprawl, they double back on themselves, shifting with the weight of bodies and histories layered thick as dust. It is within this choreography that The Risky Boys move – a trio of 22-year-old Egyptian creatives and models who have made the city’s alleys their runway and stage. But The Risky Boys – Ahmed Attef, Karim Alaa, and Mohamed Tarek – are not the product of the global fashion zeitgeist. They did not emerge from ateliers or academies. They collided, as things often do in Cairo, at the peripheries of modeling shoots. They are not here to unsettle haute couture from within but to confront its boundaries entirely. Their catwalks are neither cordoned nor ticketed; they are carved into the butcher shops, the souks, the tight and teeming alleyways of Banha and Al Mattariya, the places that made them. If fashion is an industry that speaks in dictates – seasonal edits, trends filtered through the same polished lens – then The Risky Boys force it to see something else. To look closer. This February the Risky Boys teamed up with #SceneStyled and rising Egyptian actress Dona Emam on their second installation of ‘Persona’; an intimate series they conceived as stylists and art directors and a project that strips away the expectations of public life to ask a single, unvarnished question: Who would you be if social conventions did not exist? For the full #CoverStory, head to www.SceneStyled.com or download the #SceneNow app (available on iOS and Android). Produced by: @scenestyled @mo4network SceneStyled Managing Editor: @faridaelshafie Creative Direction & Costume Design: @riskyboyss_ Creative Producer: @lordmunky Photography: @fariszaitoon DOP: @visionary_xx Editorial Design: @habibamr1 Talent: @dona_emam Makeup: @makeuppbyssara Hair: @alsagheersalons Set Design: @maria__saba Agency Producer: @heshambaghdady Gaffer: @ahmedgamal2143 @jimmys.light 2nd Camera & Sound: @eslam.ahmed.18400 1st AC: @mahmoud.gehad.217 Lighting Technician: @mazen_moohamedd Video Editor: @mariamraymone
@SceneStyled: R!SKY BOYS GET [PERSONA]L FT. DONA EMAM | @SCENESTYLED #COVER 2.0 Cairo’s streets do not sit still. They seethe, they sprawl, they double back on themselves, shifting with the weight of bodies and histories layered thick as dust. It is within this choreography that The Risky Boys move – a trio of 22-year-old Egyptian creatives and models who have made the city’s alleys their runway and stage. But The Risky Boys – Ahmed Attef, Karim Alaa, and Mohamed Tarek – are not the product of the global fashion zeitgeist. They did not emerge from ateliers or academies. They collided, as things often do in Cairo, at the peripheries of modeling shoots. They are not here to unsettle haute couture from within but to confront its boundaries entirely. Their catwalks are neither cordoned nor ticketed; they are carved into the butcher shops, the souks, the tight and teeming alleyways of Banha and Al Mattariya, the places that made them. If fashion is an industry that speaks in dictates – seasonal edits, trends filtered through the same polished lens – then The Risky Boys force it to see something else. To look closer. This February the Risky Boys teamed up with #SceneStyled and rising Egyptian actress Dona Emam on their second installation of ‘Persona’; an intimate series they conceived as stylists and art directors and a project that strips away the expectations of public life to ask a single, unvarnished question: Who would you be if social conventions did not exist? For the full #CoverStory, head to www.SceneStyled.com or download the #SceneNow app (available on iOS and Android). Produced by: @scenestyled @mo4network SceneStyled Managing Editor: @faridaelshafie Creative Direction & Costume Design: @riskyboyss_ Creative Producer: @lordmunky Photography: @fariszaitoon DOP: @visionary_xx Editorial Design: @habibamr1 Talent: @dona_emam Makeup: @makeuppbyssara Hair: @alsagheersalons Set Design: @maria__saba Agency Producer: @heshambaghdady Gaffer: @ahmedgamal2143 @jimmys.light 2nd Camera & Sound: @eslam.ahmed.18400 1st AC: @mahmoud.gehad.217 Lighting Technician: @mazen_moohamedd Video Editor: @mariamraymone
@SceneStyled: R!SKY BOYS GET [PERSONA]L FT. DONA EMAM | @SCENESTYLED #COVER 2.0 Cairo’s streets do not sit still. They seethe, they sprawl, they double back on themselves, shifting with the weight of bodies and histories layered thick as dust. It is within this choreography that The Risky Boys move – a trio of 22-year-old Egyptian creatives and models who have made the city’s alleys their runway and stage. But The Risky Boys – Ahmed Attef, Karim Alaa, and Mohamed Tarek – are not the product of the global fashion zeitgeist. They did not emerge from ateliers or academies. They collided, as things often do in Cairo, at the peripheries of modeling shoots. They are not here to unsettle haute couture from within but to confront its boundaries entirely. Their catwalks are neither cordoned nor ticketed; they are carved into the butcher shops, the souks, the tight and teeming alleyways of Banha and Al Mattariya, the places that made them. If fashion is an industry that speaks in dictates – seasonal edits, trends filtered through the same polished lens – then The Risky Boys force it to see something else. To look closer. This February the Risky Boys teamed up with #SceneStyled and rising Egyptian actress Dona Emam on their second installation of ‘Persona’; an intimate series they conceived as stylists and art directors and a project that strips away the expectations of public life to ask a single, unvarnished question: Who would you be if social conventions did not exist? For the full #CoverStory, head to www.SceneStyled.com or download the #SceneNow app (available on iOS and Android). Produced by: @scenestyled @mo4network SceneStyled Managing Editor: @faridaelshafie Creative Direction & Costume Design: @riskyboyss_ Creative Producer: @lordmunky Photography: @fariszaitoon DOP: @visionary_xx Editorial Design: @habibamr1 Talent: @dona_emam Makeup: @makeuppbyssara Hair: @alsagheersalons Set Design: @maria__saba Agency Producer: @heshambaghdady Gaffer: @ahmedgamal2143 @jimmys.light 2nd Camera & Sound: @eslam.ahmed.18400 1st AC: @mahmoud.gehad.217 Lighting Technician: @mazen_moohamedd Video Editor: @mariamraymone
@SceneStyled: R!SKY BOYS GET [PERSONA]L FT. DONA EMAM | @SCENESTYLED #COVER 2.0 Cairo’s streets do not sit still. They seethe, they sprawl, they double back on themselves, shifting with the weight of bodies and histories layered thick as dust. It is within this choreography that The Risky Boys move – a trio of 22-year-old Egyptian creatives and models who have made the city’s alleys their runway and stage. But The Risky Boys – Ahmed Attef, Karim Alaa, and Mohamed Tarek – are not the product of the global fashion zeitgeist. They did not emerge from ateliers or academies. They collided, as things often do in Cairo, at the peripheries of modeling shoots. They are not here to unsettle haute couture from within but to confront its boundaries entirely. Their catwalks are neither cordoned nor ticketed; they are carved into the butcher shops, the souks, the tight and teeming alleyways of Banha and Al Mattariya, the places that made them. If fashion is an industry that speaks in dictates – seasonal edits, trends filtered through the same polished lens – then The Risky Boys force it to see something else. To look closer. This February the Risky Boys teamed up with #SceneStyled and rising Egyptian actress Dona Emam on their second installation of ‘Persona’; an intimate series they conceived as stylists and art directors and a project that strips away the expectations of public life to ask a single, unvarnished question: Who would you be if social conventions did not exist? For the full #CoverStory, head to www.SceneStyled.com or download the #SceneNow app (available on iOS and Android). Produced by: @scenestyled @mo4network SceneStyled Managing Editor: @faridaelshafie Creative Direction & Costume Design: @riskyboyss_ Creative Producer: @lordmunky Photography: @fariszaitoon DOP: @visionary_xx Editorial Design: @habibamr1 Talent: @dona_emam Makeup: @makeuppbyssara Hair: @alsagheersalons Set Design: @maria__saba Agency Producer: @heshambaghdady Gaffer: @ahmedgamal2143 @jimmys.light 2nd Camera & Sound: @eslam.ahmed.18400 1st AC: @mahmoud.gehad.217 Lighting Technician: @mazen_moohamedd Video Editor: @mariamraymone
@SceneStyled: R!SKY BOYS GET [PERSONA]L FT. DONA EMAM | @SCENESTYLED #COVER 2.0 Cairo’s streets do not sit still. They seethe, they sprawl, they double back on themselves, shifting with the weight of bodies and histories layered thick as dust. It is within this choreography that The Risky Boys move – a trio of 22-year-old Egyptian creatives and models who have made the city’s alleys their runway and stage. But The Risky Boys – Ahmed Attef, Karim Alaa, and Mohamed Tarek – are not the product of the global fashion zeitgeist. They did not emerge from ateliers or academies. They collided, as things often do in Cairo, at the peripheries of modeling shoots. They are not here to unsettle haute couture from within but to confront its boundaries entirely. Their catwalks are neither cordoned nor ticketed; they are carved into the butcher shops, the souks, the tight and teeming alleyways of Banha and Al Mattariya, the places that made them. If fashion is an industry that speaks in dictates – seasonal edits, trends filtered through the same polished lens – then The Risky Boys force it to see something else. To look closer. This February the Risky Boys teamed up with #SceneStyled and rising Egyptian actress Dona Emam on their second installation of ‘Persona’; an intimate series they conceived as stylists and art directors and a project that strips away the expectations of public life to ask a single, unvarnished question: Who would you be if social conventions did not exist? For the full #CoverStory, head to www.SceneStyled.com or download the #SceneNow app (available on iOS and Android). Produced by: @scenestyled @mo4network SceneStyled Managing Editor: @faridaelshafie Creative Direction & Costume Design: @riskyboyss_ Creative Producer: @lordmunky Photography: @fariszaitoon DOP: @visionary_xx Editorial Design: @habibamr1 Talent: @dona_emam Makeup: @makeuppbyssara Hair: @alsagheersalons Set Design: @maria__saba Agency Producer: @heshambaghdady Gaffer: @ahmedgamal2143 @jimmys.light 2nd Camera & Sound: @eslam.ahmed.18400 1st AC: @mahmoud.gehad.217 Lighting Technician: @mazen_moohamedd Video Editor: @mariamraymone
@SceneStyled: R!SKY BOYS GET [PERSONA]L FT. DONA EMAM | @SCENESTYLED #COVER 2.0 Cairo’s streets do not sit still. They seethe, they sprawl, they double back on themselves, shifting with the weight of bodies and histories layered thick as dust. It is within this choreography that The Risky Boys move – a trio of 22-year-old Egyptian creatives and models who have made the city’s alleys their runway and stage. But The Risky Boys – Ahmed Attef, Karim Alaa, and Mohamed Tarek – are not the product of the global fashion zeitgeist. They did not emerge from ateliers or academies. They collided, as things often do in Cairo, at the peripheries of modeling shoots. They are not here to unsettle haute couture from within but to confront its boundaries entirely. Their catwalks are neither cordoned nor ticketed; they are carved into the butcher shops, the souks, the tight and teeming alleyways of Banha and Al Mattariya, the places that made them. If fashion is an industry that speaks in dictates – seasonal edits, trends filtered through the same polished lens – then The Risky Boys force it to see something else. To look closer. This February the Risky Boys teamed up with #SceneStyled and rising Egyptian actress Dona Emam on their second installation of ‘Persona’; an intimate series they conceived as stylists and art directors and a project that strips away the expectations of public life to ask a single, unvarnished question: Who would you be if social conventions did not exist? For the full #CoverStory, head to www.SceneStyled.com or download the #SceneNow app (available on iOS and Android). Produced by: @scenestyled @mo4network SceneStyled Managing Editor: @faridaelshafie Creative Direction & Costume Design: @riskyboyss_ Creative Producer: @lordmunky Photography: @fariszaitoon DOP: @visionary_xx Editorial Design: @habibamr1 Talent: @dona_emam Makeup: @makeuppbyssara Hair: @alsagheersalons Set Design: @maria__saba Agency Producer: @heshambaghdady Gaffer: @ahmedgamal2143 @jimmys.light 2nd Camera & Sound: @eslam.ahmed.18400 1st AC: @mahmoud.gehad.217 Lighting Technician: @mazen_moohamedd Video Editor: @mariamraymone
@SceneStyled: R!SKY BOYS GET [PERSONA]L FT. DONA EMAM | @SCENESTYLED #COVER 2.0 Cairo’s streets do not sit still. They seethe, they sprawl, they double back on themselves, shifting with the weight of bodies and histories layered thick as dust. It is within this choreography that The Risky Boys move – a trio of 22-year-old Egyptian creatives and models who have made the city’s alleys their runway and stage. But The Risky Boys – Ahmed Attef, Karim Alaa, and Mohamed Tarek – are not the product of the global fashion zeitgeist. They did not emerge from ateliers or academies. They collided, as things often do in Cairo, at the peripheries of modeling shoots. They are not here to unsettle haute couture from within but to confront its boundaries entirely. Their catwalks are neither cordoned nor ticketed; they are carved into the butcher shops, the souks, the tight and teeming alleyways of Banha and Al Mattariya, the places that made them. If fashion is an industry that speaks in dictates – seasonal edits, trends filtered through the same polished lens – then The Risky Boys force it to see something else. To look closer. This February the Risky Boys teamed up with #SceneStyled and rising Egyptian actress Dona Emam on their second installation of ‘Persona’; an intimate series they conceived as stylists and art directors and a project that strips away the expectations of public life to ask a single, unvarnished question: Who would you be if social conventions did not exist? For the full #CoverStory, head to www.SceneStyled.com or download the #SceneNow app (available on iOS and Android). Produced by: @scenestyled @mo4network SceneStyled Managing Editor: @faridaelshafie Creative Direction & Costume Design: @riskyboyss_ Creative Producer: @lordmunky Photography: @fariszaitoon DOP: @visionary_xx Editorial Design: @habibamr1 Talent: @dona_emam Makeup: @makeuppbyssara Hair: @alsagheersalons Set Design: @maria__saba Agency Producer: @heshambaghdady Gaffer: @ahmedgamal2143 @jimmys.light 2nd Camera & Sound: @eslam.ahmed.18400 1st AC: @mahmoud.gehad.217 Lighting Technician: @mazen_moohamedd Video Editor: @mariamraymone
@SceneStyled: R!SKY BOYS GET [PERSONA]L FT. DONA EMAM | @SCENESTYLED #COVER 2.0 Cairo’s streets do not sit still. They seethe, they sprawl, they double back on themselves, shifting with the weight of bodies and histories layered thick as dust. It is within this choreography that The Risky Boys move – a trio of 22-year-old Egyptian creatives and models who have made the city’s alleys their runway and stage. But The Risky Boys – Ahmed Attef, Karim Alaa, and Mohamed Tarek – are not the product of the global fashion zeitgeist. They did not emerge from ateliers or academies. They collided, as things often do in Cairo, at the peripheries of modeling shoots. They are not here to unsettle haute couture from within but to confront its boundaries entirely. Their catwalks are neither cordoned nor ticketed; they are carved into the butcher shops, the souks, the tight and teeming alleyways of Banha and Al Mattariya, the places that made them. If fashion is an industry that speaks in dictates – seasonal edits, trends filtered through the same polished lens – then The Risky Boys force it to see something else. To look closer. This February the Risky Boys teamed up with #SceneStyled and rising Egyptian actress Dona Emam on their second installation of ‘Persona’; an intimate series they conceived as stylists and art directors and a project that strips away the expectations of public life to ask a single, unvarnished question: Who would you be if social conventions did not exist? For the full #CoverStory, head to www.SceneStyled.com or download the #SceneNow app (available on iOS and Android). Produced by: @scenestyled @mo4network SceneStyled Managing Editor: @faridaelshafie Creative Direction & Costume Design: @riskyboyss_ Creative Producer: @lordmunky Photography: @fariszaitoon DOP: @visionary_xx Editorial Design: @habibamr1 Talent: @dona_emam Makeup: @makeuppbyssara Hair: @alsagheersalons Set Design: @maria__saba Agency Producer: @heshambaghdady Gaffer: @ahmedgamal2143 @jimmys.light 2nd Camera & Sound: @eslam.ahmed.18400 1st AC: @mahmoud.gehad.217 Lighting Technician: @mazen_moohamedd Video Editor: @mariamraymone
@SceneStyled: R!SKY BOYS GET [PERSONA]L FT. DONA EMAM | @SCENESTYLED #COVER 2.0 Cairo’s streets do not sit still. They seethe, they sprawl, they double back on themselves, shifting with the weight of bodies and histories layered thick as dust. It is within this choreography that The Risky Boys move – a trio of 22-year-old Egyptian creatives and models who have made the city’s alleys their runway and stage. But The Risky Boys – Ahmed Attef, Karim Alaa, and Mohamed Tarek – are not the product of the global fashion zeitgeist. They did not emerge from ateliers or academies. They collided, as things often do in Cairo, at the peripheries of modeling shoots. They are not here to unsettle haute couture from within but to confront its boundaries entirely. Their catwalks are neither cordoned nor ticketed; they are carved into the butcher shops, the souks, the tight and teeming alleyways of Banha and Al Mattariya, the places that made them. If fashion is an industry that speaks in dictates – seasonal edits, trends filtered through the same polished lens – then The Risky Boys force it to see something else. To look closer. This February the Risky Boys teamed up with #SceneStyled and rising Egyptian actress Dona Emam on their second installation of ‘Persona’; an intimate series they conceived as stylists and art directors and a project that strips away the expectations of public life to ask a single, unvarnished question: Who would you be if social conventions did not exist? For the full #CoverStory, head to www.SceneStyled.com or download the #SceneNow app (available on iOS and Android). Produced by: @scenestyled @mo4network SceneStyled Managing Editor: @faridaelshafie Creative Direction & Costume Design: @riskyboyss_ Creative Producer: @lordmunky Photography: @fariszaitoon DOP: @visionary_xx Editorial Design: @habibamr1 Talent: @dona_emam Makeup: @makeuppbyssara Hair: @alsagheersalons Set Design: @maria__saba Agency Producer: @heshambaghdady Gaffer: @ahmedgamal2143 @jimmys.light 2nd Camera & Sound: @eslam.ahmed.18400 1st AC: @mahmoud.gehad.217 Lighting Technician: @mazen_moohamedd Video Editor: @mariamraymone