This is the definitive ranking of the —the 17 women who defined the Golden Era. The "Big Six" (The Untouchables) 1. Cindy Crawford (Born: February 20, 1966) The architect of the modern supermodel. With her mole and athletic physique, Crawford was everywhere: MTV, Pepsi commercials, 600+ magazine covers. She made modeling accessible and aspirational.
The model's model. Valletta was the face of the 1990s minimalist movement—Calvin Klein, Jil Sander, Prada. She had a striking, intelligent look that signaled the shift from boobs-and-butts to sophistication.
The German "Blonde Bombshell." Discovered in a Dusseldorf nightclub, Schiffer was the 1990s answer to Brigitte Bardot. She booked the most Guess? campaigns of any model and replaced Cindy as Revlon’s queen.
However, one notable muse who straddles the line between "7" and "17" is (born December 17), but more relevant is that July 17 sits squarely in the heart of "Model Summer"—the period when agencies like Elite and Ford scout new talent in Ibiza and St. Tropez. It is the symbolic birthday of the supermodel era itself. Conclusion: The Unrepeatable Era The "supermodels from 7 17 top" represent a perfect storm of culture: the excess of the 80s, the minimalism of the 90s, the rise of MTV, and the fall of couture exclusivity. These 17 women (plus the 7 pioneers of the 70s) did not just wear clothes; they made the clothes.
The face of "facial symmetry." Turlington is often called the most beautiful woman in fashion history. Graceful, calm, and yoga-obsessed, she represented high-class sophistication. Her Calvin Klein Eternity campaign is legendary.
The Danish sensualist. Christensen was the muse for the 1990s Victoria's Secret catalog but with a European edge. Her iconic "instant" photo for Out of the Storm is one of the most famous fashion images ever shot.

