We all know horse girls. Nurphoto / Getty Images
Horse girls were girls who were obsessed with horses, drew horses all the time, went to horseback riding camp, owned a ton of books on horses, and probably had a fake horse for their American Girl Doll. A major subcategory of horse girls was unicorn girls. But horse girls weren t the only type of kid growing up. There were also dolphin girls. Steve Parsons/PA Images via Getty Images
Dolphin girls were super into Lisa Frank, books about mermaids, and, obvi, dolphins. They definitely had framed pics of them kissing dolphins at Sea World.
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Cynthia grew up surrounded by the arts
Cynthia was raised by her parents, Ed and Clementine Rowley, in Illinois her dad was a science teacher, but her mother’s side of the family dabbled in the arts…which likely inspired her love for fashion design. “My mom’s whole side of the family were painters. My grandmother did a lot of self-portraits like this [upstairs] painting,” Cynthia told the New York Times. “She always wore Chinese dresses like that, even though she was 100 percent Italian. It was a very eccentric upbringing, with theme rooms and stuff.”
Cynthia made her first piece of clothing a dress at the age of 7. (I was literally playing with my Barbie dolls and watching