Nicole has been an original-era Swiftie since she was 13 — the kind who knows the deep cuts, the eras, and the emotional whiplash between them. And potentially has the foot heart tattoo to go along with it. Loving the music was never just about listening; it was about dressing up, imagining stages, and playing pretend long before that felt embarrassing.
Somewhere along the way, people started saying the quiet part out loud:
“You kind of look like her.”
And kids? Kids say it with their whole chest.
Golden Era is Nicole’s very adult, very intentional way of saying yes to that magic — without pretending to be anyone she isn’t.
Golden Era is Nicole’s very adult, very intentional way of saying yes to that magic — without pretending to be anyone she isn’t.
She doesn’t claim to be a sound-alike or a replica. She doesn’t chase perfection. What she offers is something more playful and more honest: a Taylor-inspired pop fantasy built from costumes, mannerisms, sing-alongs, and the shared language of being a fan.
Nicole comes from a creative life that spans photography, writing, acting “just enough to be dangerous,” and raising kids — which means she understands imagination, attention spans, and how to read a room. She knows when to lean into the sparkle and when to let the audience take over the moment.
This isn’t impersonation. It’s grown-up make-believe, done with care, legality, and a whole lot of heart.
Because sometimes the most joyful thing you can do is say:
What if we just played?
04 stillness
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