Skip to main content

The Real Life Barbie Doll Valeria Lukyanova

While some have claimed that Barbie was molded or sculptured from the actress Julia Roberts, that's why Barbie's fictional full name is Barbara Millicent Roberts, who you are about to meet is a beautiful model, a one-of-a-kind work of art.

Meet Valeria Lukyanova, she born August 23, 1985 at Tiraspol, in what was then part of Moldavian SSR in the Soviet Union. Irina, her mother, had worked for the military sector and her father was a builder who also worked part-time as a disk jockey. During her childhood, Lukyanova had a huge doll collection, and she was intrigued by spirituality. She studied at Odessa State Academy of Constructions and Architecture and has a bachelor's degree in architecture there.

She is a Moldavian-Ukrainian model, best known for her resemblance to a Barbie doll, with several sources describing her as, among other handles, a "real-life Barbie doll" and "human Barbie". To enhance the effect, Valeria Lukyanova uses makeup and contact lenses over her naturally green eyes. She has stated that she has had breast implants, but that the rest of her body is completely natural and slender due to daily gym workouts and a special diet. On February 28, 2014, she revealed she would consume no food or water in an attempt to live exclusively on light and air, a practice called Breatharianism.

Lukyanova won the World Wide beauty contest in 2007, "Miss Diamond Crown of the World". In that beauty pageant, there were about 300 contestants, any girl could participate, and there was nothing in the rules forbidding plastic surgery. She fortunately won the title. After her victory, she had multiple photo sessions and interviews in the Russian media, some even including erotic photos. After she posted numerous photos and videos of herself on the web, Lukyanova developed a worldwide following for her Barbie doll-like appearance. Her first famous interview and photos outside Russia were posted by Jezebel website, followed by a professional photosession in V by Sebastian Faena.

Lukyanova is an educator at the School of Out-of-Body Travel, described by herself as "an international school in which our instructors show students how to leave their physical body and travel in their spiritual body." She rose to prominence after reports of her "almost inhuman beauty" surfaced online. This led the media to describe her as a "human Barbie", "real-life Barbie doll", and "living Barbie". She was the subject of the 2013 documentary film Space Barbie by Vice (magazine), which later depicted her life.




Valeria has gone to great lengths in order to earn her Human Barbie title. She regularly wears doll-like contact lenses, extensions, studio makeup, and has undergone several surgeries to achieve her unrealistic look; she dare posted a picture with no make-up at all, and we have to admit she looks a little better without it all!



Some of her plastic work includes breast enlargement, facial reconstruction surgery including a nose job, and she’s even allegedly had ribs removed to make her waist smaller! Even when the Human Barbie takes off all of her makeup, we can’t exactly call her “au naturale” with this much work done.

If you want to engage a conversation or simply follow her posts, you can reach her through her google plus account ;-)

I don't know about you people, but for me, she's so gorgeous! ;-)

Cheerio!

Comments

  1. I just noticed you mentioned Human Barbie in this post, so thank you for that :)
    Just wondering, is the any chance you'd consider adding my link to the post as well?
    I think it would be super-useful for your visitors.
    Let me know if this is possible and if so, anything I can do to help.
    Thanks,
    Valeriya

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Most Expensive Philippine Coin Ever Sold

I personally am fond of collecting old coins. I have an ample collection, and decent if I may add, of Philippine old coins. Though I collect coins for a hobby, some people kept on asking me how I acquire those coins and if I’m selling one. So in some cases, when I visit the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (Central Bank of the Philippines), I always try to order an additional from my own to sell or give it as a gift to my friends. I always wonder, what Philippine coin is the most expensive ever sold, and how much. Priced at $22, 000 or Php 1,038,136.00 as of this writing ($1 = Php 47.19), the 1903 San Francisco Mint fifty centavos is perhaps the most expensive United States-Philippines coin ever sold. Only 2 specimens have reported and only one formally auctioned for the price mentioned. Do not mistake this one for the common 1903 Philadelphia Mint fifty centavos. This coin is an absolute rarity. How this coin surfaced? The story behind that incident is still a myste

The Great Badjang or Giant Taro

As we try to come up with things to do to make our days productive this Pandemic, a lot of people are leaning towards Gardening. Here in the Philippines, people are becoming crazy with a certain plant. It has large leaves which resembles an Elephant’s ear. Badjang, as we call it here in the Philippines, scientifically called Alocasia macrorrhizos, is a species of flowering plant in the arum family that it is native to rainforests of Island Southeast Asia, New Guinea, and Queensland and has long been cultivated here in the Philippines, many Pacific islands, and elsewhere in the tropics. It is also famous as Giant Taro. The giant taro was originally domesticated in the Philippines, but are known from wild specimens to early Austronesians in Taiwan. From the Philippines, they spread outwards to the rest of Island Southeast Asia and eastward to Oceania where it became one of the staple crops of Pacific Islanders. They are one of the four main species of aroids (taros) cultivated by Austron

Hanamichi Sakuragi: In Real Life

I am not that young, though I am not that old to have watched the Manga Series Slum Dunk. A lot of people is being fascinated with the game of basketball. Almost everyone knows how to play the game. Maybe, just maybe, NBA really popularized the sports. Apparently, one story caught my attention, and surely, it is really worth to tell ;-) Slam Dunk (スラムダンク Suramu Danku?) is a sports-themed manga series written by Takehiko Inoue about a basketball team from Shōhoku High School. It was first serialized in Shueisha's Weekly Shōnen Jump in Japan from 1990 to 1996 and had also been adapted into an anime series by Toei Animation which had been broadcast worldwide, enjoying much popularity particularly in Japan, several other Asian countries and Europe. Inoue later used basketball as a central theme in two subsequent manga titles: Buzzer Beater and Real. In 2010, Inoue received special commendations from the Japan Basketball Association for helping popularize basketball in Japan.