The INSIDER Summary:
- Kaia Gerber is only 16 years old and is already dominating the fashion world.
- As the daughter of supermodel Cindy Crawford, Gerber is definitely following in her mom's footsteps.
- She made her debut for Calvin Klein at New York Fashion Week.
- Since then, she's walked the runway for high-profile designers like Alexander Wang, Burberry, Versace, and Prada.
Having turned 16 on September 3, Kaia Gerber wasted no time in making her mark on the international runway scene.
Just four days after reaching the legal age limit for models to walk on the catwalk, Gerber - who is the daughter of Cindy Crawford and Rande Gerber - made her runway debut at the Calvin Klein show during New York Fashion Week.
Not stopping there, Gerber went on to walk for Alexander Wang, Coach, Marc Jacobs and Rihanna's Fenty Puma.
Conveniently born just at the start of a new season, the 16-year-old went on to dominate the international fashion weeks in both London - for Burberry - and Milan - Moschino, Versace, Fendi and Prada - with Paris now seemingly projecting an inevitable 4 out of 4.
Her fashion week highlight so far, no doubt, has been walking the the same show as her mother, as Versace put on an iconic showcase in memory of Gianni Versace, brother of Donatella and founder of the fashion house who was killed 20 years ago.
Paying tribute to the designer, a clique of his most beloved supermodels - Carla Bruni, Claudia Schiffer, Naomi Campbell, Cindy Crawford and Helena Christensen - stepped out to a stunned and delighted front row.
Revealing her excitement at having been cast in such a monumental show, Gerber wrote on Instagram "Such an incredible show to be a part of! @donatella_versace YOU DID IT! An amazing celebration and tribute. so special to me and so close to my heart. I'm beyond grateful to walk alongside all these inspiring and powerful women."
Frequently dubbed 'the new Kendall Jenner', Gerber's career looks set to soar at similarly stratospheric rate.
If her first month as an eligible runway model is anything to go by, we'd say it's inevitable.