Lauren Sánchez Has an Audrey Hepburn Style Moment on Her Wedding Day
Lauren Sánchez was channeling old Hollywood glamour on the morning of her wedding day in Venice, on Friday. The soon-to-be wife of Jeff Bezos left the Aman Hotel, where she has been staying during her three-day wedding event, wearing an outfit reminiscent of Audrey Hepburn's signature style.
Sánchez wore a fitted blazer with a structured silhouette, notched lapels and black button details. The jacket had a nipped waist that created an hourglass shape. She completed the look with a matching cream pencil skirt that hit around knee length.
More from WWD
Can High Heels Survive Venice's Cobblestone Streets? Here's What Shoes Guests at the Bezos-Sánchez Wedding Should Wear
Emilia Wickstead's Latest Bridal Collection Cements Category Growth
Jonathan Anderson on Building His Dior World, One Show at a Time
For accessories, the bride opted for large sunglasses by Tom Ford and a silk headscarf, adding to the vintage appeal of her look.
Sánchez started her wedding week on Wednesday, wearing a vintage Alexander McQueen dress from the brand's spring 2003 collection. She wore a black one-shoulder evening gown with a fitted, floor-length silhouette. The dress featured diagonal white beaded stripes that create a dynamic pattern across the entire garment.
On Thursday, Sánchez joined her wedding guests at a welcome party, wearing a dress from Schiaparelli's spring 2025 couture collection, featuring a strapless design with a balconette-inspired neckline embroidered with greens and blues.
Guests of the wedding have also delivered high fashion looks while in Venice. Kendall Jenner wore a minidress from Roberto Cavalli's spring 2001 ready-to-wear collection, while Kim Kardashian was seen in Balenciaga.
Lauren Sánchez and Jeff Bezos are hosting a grand wedding celebration in Venice, Italy, spanning multiple days and attracting worldwide attention along with a celebrity-filled guest list. Among those attending the event are Leonardo DiCaprio, Kim Kardashian, Oprah Winfrey, Eva Longoria, Sydney Sweeney, Khloe Kardashian, Tom Brady and Ivanka Trump.
View Gallery
Launch Gallery: Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez's Wedding Photos: All the Celebrity Guests in Venice
Best of WWD
Lauren Sánchez's Fashion Evolution Through the Years: From Her Days as TV News Anchor to Today
Labubu vs. 'Lafufu': How to Spot the Differences Between Real and Fake
Bob Haircut Trend: Leslie Bibb, Halle Berry & More Looks [Photos]
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Vogue
44 minutes ago
- Vogue
Christopher Esber Resort 2026 Collection
In a season brimming with 'reinvented classics,' Christopher Esber said he wanted to bring a little whimsy to his resort collection through draping and sculpting rather than just cutting fabric away. 'This collection is really about fantasy meets function,' the designer said in a Zoom interview from his studio in Sydney. 'In my mind, I kept playing back the idea of escaping, of desert horizons, sunbaked highways and bringing in more textiles and colors that speak to that landscape.' It's been almost 35 years since Thelma & Louise just kept on driving, but for Esber that feminist classic was top of mind. Did that mean he, too, would make a run for it? Definitely not, the designer said. 'I just really connected with that spirit of changing things up and forging your own way.' Part of the process was giving himself the freedom to revisit and refine things that perhaps aren't considered cool anymore, he said, like an aged stripe or a snip of lace encrusted unevenly on a yellow top or inserted on a green dress. The goal was to strike a balance between retro and contemporary aesthetics. An out-of-character garment, for example, can sometimes turn out to be a perfect fit. One can well imagine the mileage fans could get from some of these pieces, like a sporty coffee-colored bomber, a billowy trench with a patterned green lining, or tailored jeans spliced with suede. The designer smartly developed some ensembles that can be either attached as a complete silhouette or worn separately; in that vein, an asymmetrical chocolate top and grape-colored skirt looked strong. Esber has long married various materials in odd-couple ways; this season that included scalloping suede or jersey with lace; transposing python effects into exotic-looking prints and superfine knits; a silver coil on a dress or bag; or a necktie spooled into a halter top. The idea of shredded snakeskin appeared on a georgette dress intricately cut to show some flesh yet 'hit in all the right places,' the designer said. That was one of a few numbers that were definitely for those who dress like they've got nothing to hide. Not every experiment landed, but there were plenty of the kind of sexy, sinuous—and commercial—clothes here to keep Esber's base coming back for more, whether they are hitting the road for real or only in spirit.


Vogue
an hour ago
- Vogue
Reese Cooper Spring 2026 Menswear Collection
At 27, Reese Cooper has officially entered that stage in life where he needs to be ready for the wedding circuit. But when his cousin tied the knot in South Carolina recently, he found himself in the ironic position, after nearly a decade of designing, of having to hit a 'mass-pirational' retailer for a last-minute suit on his way to the airport. 'I was like, 'This is ridiculous, I need to fix that,'' the designer recalled in a showroom in the Upper Marais where both his namesake menswear collection and his lighter-priced RCOS line were on display. For spring, Cooper set about recalibrating outdoorsy California casual with a more mature, tailored, and mostly unisex offer that will easily pass muster in more elevated settings while still retaining sporty touches. Ripstop cords cinched the waist on blazers, a trench and a Harrington jacket in nylon; oversized cargo pockets gave button-downs or a printed poncho a fresh functionality, yet also looked crisp and sophisticated on a black, white and red houndstooth. As ever, his signature carabiner, a piece custom-designed by a former aerospace engineer befriended over Instagram, provided a throughline. Of his process, the designer explained, 'My favorite thing personally is to take something that you would traditionally find, then take the right thing and put it in the wrong place or the other way around.' Not that anything looked out of place here. Last Tuesday, Cooper's posse of chosen family, among them the stylist Savannah White, traveled with him an hour north of L.A. to the Angeles National Forest. There, his models posed on a rock in the San Gabriel River, in a location the designer had discovered on a hike. In a telling detail, he shot this lookbook with a thumbs-up from his friends over at the local Forest Service (look for new developments in that budding relationship next season). It speaks volumes about Cooper's interest in building on community, a philosophy he absorbed from Virgil Abloh. "If you're doing something fun that people want to be around, that should be the focus," he said. One doesn't often hear that during the fashion week swirl. Let's see where that takes him next.


Vogue
an hour ago
- Vogue
Isabel Marant Spring 2026 Menswear Collection
If there's one French fashion brand that has wanderlust baked right in, it's Isabel Marant. Surveying the men's lookbook as styled by Emmanuelle Alt but also gazing into an imaginary landscape beyond, creative director Kim Bekker observed, 'He's headed to the steppes and out into the desert, from village to village, surfing.' Here, then, was a wardrobe for the eternal nomad, wherever he roams, be it Paris, the Sahara or Ibiza, one of the designer's favorite destinations, which appeared here as an embroidered postcard on the back of a varsity jacket. Linen shirts were layered over tees, and paired with easy, straight-cut trousers. Cargo details are a major current for spring, and here they appeared on blazers that were less utilitarian than refined, for the traveler who prefers keeping all his essentials right in his pockets. Drawstring waists gave tailored pieces a sense of ease while here and there an embroidered floral motif lent a tinge of romance without going full-blown folkloric. The color palette, too, told a story of scorched earth and canyon sunsets, in clay red, sage green and dusty rose. Statement pieces included a lightweight bomber in washed leather, an ecru jean jacket with floral embroidery on the breast pocket, and a washed-out denim jacket with a botanical print, an idea that also cropped up on jeans. The keepers here echoed Marant's philosophy: sophisticated enough to wear around the city, yet laid back enough for wherever the next flight lands.