Connecting with fans is very important to me and useful, too! It's almost as if I have my own focus group. If I put up one picture that gets 1,000 likes and one that gets 15,000 likes, it gives me a big clue as to what people like to see.

Fashion can be a very fickle lady, especially when it comes to models - fashion likes to turn on its own.

Something I always look for in an outfit is to have a standout piece.

I think, as long as you're secure with yourself and happy with yourself, it really doesn't matter what the world around you thinks.

When I started my first blog years ago, I just wanted to share my perspective. For a long time, models had been these mute pretty faces - and I wanted to have a voice.

Having worked with many of the world's top modeling agencies for the last decade, I've seen what works and doesn't work in managing a model's career.

Designers from Milan think that 'more is more,' like Cavalli and Dolce & Gabbana.

When I started, I knew nothing about fashion. I remember, my first day going to my agency, I was wearing these huge bell-bottoms - they were patchwork corduroy and denim, which, at the time, I thought were amazing. My agent told me, 'You have a casting with Prada - you have to burn those jeans.'

My besties do Victoria's Secret. I just don't do it.

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

As a woman, sometimes we stress on always being of the moment, and that is a lot of pressure, especially for young girls.

I'm obsessed with historical English royalty.

Oh, the dilemma of the summer music festival. On one hand, we ladies try very hard to look cute walking around those muddy fields in our cowboy boots and cut-offs. On the other hand, we want to look like we really didn't try at all and just rolled out of bed looking this way.

Weirdly enough, in my 14 years of modeling, I've only worn a blonde wig three times. I have no idea why I've never been given the option to really try blonde as a model. But here I am doing it on my own.

If it weren't for my Irish dancing, I wouldn't be modeling.

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

You can teach a girl how to model, how to take a pretty picture, and how to walk, but you can't teach personality.

Previously, someone would interview me, and if they liked me, it'd be a great story. If they hated me, it'd be a horrible story. I had no way to say anything. Social media changed things for people who didn't have a voice.

I didn't know anything about fashion. You would see me in the biggest sweater with jeans or the tightest elastic pants. Not nice clothes. My mom took me a lot to consignment stores when I was younger, and I never really got to go to fancy high-class stores, so... vintage was like a step up.

If I want a hamburger, I'm going to have one. No 21-year-old should be worrying about whether she fits a sample size.

Models are supposed to be a muse to you. Why is a muse always the same body type, the same look? It's boring.

I was the first model to get a blog and talk about anything in modeling.

A little personal trick: apply brown eyeliner throughout the day and then just add a little black over the top for a night look.

I remember working with Agyness Deyn. At the time, she was the only one who had short hair as a model. I remember being so envious of her because we would all be getting our hair pulled for two hours backstage, and she was getting a new haircut almost every other show.