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Kylie Jenner's Miu Miu Campaign Faces Harsh Backlash
Kylie Jenner's Miu Miu Campaign Faces Harsh Backlash

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Kylie Jenner's Miu Miu Campaign Faces Harsh Backlash

Kylie Jenner may have landed one of the most coveted spots in high fashion, fronting Miu Miu's Fall/Winter 2025 campaign, but the internet has made it crystal clear: not everyone is impressed. The 27-year-old beauty mogul and reality star appears in a new series of promotional images for the cult-favorite Prada offshoot, as unveiled this week by the brand and its Creative Director, Miuccia Prada. Styled by the ever-provocative Lotta Volkova, the campaign was intended to reflect the brand's signature blend of intellectual quirk, youthful rebellion, and high-fashion oddity. But Jenner's presence, many fans argue, misses the mark entirely. And social media did not hold back. 'This Is So Off Brand' The collection itself is classic Miu Miu. One of the campaign's key visuals features Jenner in an oversized forest green chunky knit cardigan layered over a white tank, a matching skirt stopping mid-thigh, and embellished calf-high socks paired with black leather oxfords. Another look shows her in a navy blue polo with a red bandeau layered underneath, a floppy hat, gray trousers, and heavy accessories. A third ensemble opts for sleek minimalism, featuring a black satin coat, a pink handbag, and more of the signature socks and shoes combo. But the criticisms came less for the clothes and more for the face behind them. 'She's not whimsical enough to be a Miu Miu girl,' one Twitter user wrote, echoing the sentiment of dozens of others lamenting what they see as a betrayal of the brand's identity. 'Lol this is what influencing is doing to fashion Killing it softly,' another user posted. 'The face doesn't match the style,' one tweet stated bluntly. 'These pics are so shitty lmao no hate to Kylie but what the fuck is Miu Miu doing,' said another, reflecting broader confusion over the brand's decision. 'The Look in Her Eyes Is So… Void?' Critics weren't just skeptical of Jenner's fit for Miu Miu's playful and experimental tone. They also questioned the quality of the images themselves. 'Not just about the model choice. Those photos are genuinely bad. I thought Miu Miu was good at maintaining brand authenticity,' one post read. 'These pictures look like when I beg my friends to take pictures of me and end up looking like this hot mess,' someone else joked. 'The look in her eyes is so… void? I don't know how to explain it but makeup used to give her character. She should go back to that,' another wrote, highlighting what many see as a lifeless or disconnected energy in the photos. The campaign was, ostensibly, a high-fashion statement. But to some, it came off more like a poorly staged influencer shoot. 'Where Are the Weird Supermodels?' The backlash also touched on the decline of unconventional beauty and models for the rise of celebrity and influencer casting in the fashion industry. 'Fashion is really dead,' one person posted. 'Where are the weird supermodels with big foreheads, wide-set eyes, different noses, crooked teeth? I DON'T want Kylie Jenner in an editorial. NOBODY WANTS.' Another post threw even sharper shade: 'All this because you guys keep saying she's a better model than her sister. Eye roll.' It's not the first time fans have pitted Kylie against her model sister Kendall Jenner, who is a longtime runway regular for high-fashion houses like Givenchy, Versace, and yes, Prada. 'Remember when people said she models better than her sister,' another post taunted, reigniting the familiar debate. Miu Miu's Creative Gamble And Its Fallout For Miu Miu, this campaign was likely a strategic fusion of celebrity pull and creative provocation. With Kylie Jenner's name attached, the campaign was guaranteed press coverage. And with Volkova's styling, it was going to raise eyebrows either way. Still, not all reactions were negative. Jenner's core fans praised her for 'breaking into high fashion,' and some fashion insiders noted that the brand has always thrived on tension between the unexpected and the eccentric. Yet, the overwhelming online narrative suggests that, for many longtime Miu Miu devotees, this particular tension snapped a little too hard. The post Kylie Jenner's Miu Miu Campaign Faces Harsh Backlash appeared first on Where Is The Buzz | Breaking News, Entertainment, Exclusive Interviews & More. Solve the daily Crossword

Ciao bella — how to dress for a Roman holiday
Ciao bella — how to dress for a Roman holiday

Times

time15-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Times

Ciao bella — how to dress for a Roman holiday

I know it's the French that we Brits are supposed to get excited about, style-wise, and indeed I did summon up some enthusiasm on these very pages last week. But for me it's all about the Italians. It's always about the Italians. The so-called tomato girl summer that took over social media a couple of years ago — a telling conflation of food and fashion — is still alive and kicking. Although, what with the temperatures and my limited skill set when it comes to dealing with them, mine is thus far proving more of a passata girl summer. Food. Fashion. It's encapsulated by one Miuccia Prada, who, unlike her austerely clad French counterparts, will present herself at the end of a catwalk show in head-to-toe red satin, and who — just in case that isn't enough for you — also owns a cake shop. I am in Rome as I write, for Dolce & Gabbana's Alta Moda show, which I review here. The city is as ridiculously ravishing as ever, but then so are the Romans. Sure, it can be tricky to see them, obscured as they tend to be in the summer months by several dozen burnt and be-bumbagged foreigners. But when you do … • Read more fashion advice and style inspiration from our experts What they channel in their wardrobes might be called joie de vivre if it weren't for the fact that this is the wrong language, so I will refer to it instead as sprezzatura. The Italians love colour and pattern, embracing it in such a way as to look classy rather than as if they are angling for an Instagram showing. JJ Martin, a Milan-based American who runs a kaleidoscopic label called La DoubleJ, goes as far as to call them 'geniuses. They just inherently understand tasteful arrangements of pattern and colour. It's as if they have a special DNA strand that embeds style in the bloodstream.' Here's what makes up the Italian summer uniform. This is a different species to the floral numbers that we tend to turn to. Forget Mapp and Lucia. Think Monica and Sophia. (Bellucci and Loren, on the off-chance that this needs further clarification.) It's not about the village fête. It's about drinks on a terrace somewhere on the Amalfi coast. Eschew ditzy prints. What you want is a ritzy print, one that's bold and very possibly geometric. You might also factor in the idea of an unwaisted style, the better to come over suitably operatic. And also, handily, to enjoy that second helping of pasta. La DoubleJ's signature swing maxi — in a hefty silk twill, with T-shirt sleeves — is the best around in terms of ever-after quality and print options (£770, At a less hair-raising price point there's Boden's Maya maxi (£120, and New Look's fruit-print wide-strap midi (£37.99, No, not to sleep in. The Italians don't wear PJs in bed. (See Bellucci, Monica, above.) They wear them to add a boudoir-adjacent frisson to the state of being fully conscious. Dolce & Gabbana has turned the day-pyjama genre into an art form, although suffice to say that if you have to ask the price you can't afford them. My more real-world favourites are a jazzy print linen pair from Karen Millen, with the option to go for shorts as well as trousers (£111.20 for the shirt, £119.20 for the trousers, £103.20 for the shorts, Bellissima. • The new must-have summer trousers (you probably already own a pair) It's got to the point in Rome this week where I am almost wondering whether there is some kind of municipal diktat prohibiting any sunglasses that couldn't also serve as welding goggles. & Other Stories' cool-girl tortoiseshell aviators would fit right in here (£32, AllSaints' giant squared-off cat's eyes, in black or a paler take on tortoiseshell that it calls (ahem) snow leopard, are more straightforwardly chic (£125, It might be a top, it might be a dress, but it's any self-respecting Italiana's favourite way to sizzle come summer. House of CB's Adabella, in a shade it calls Italian tomato, is a particular cracker (£179, The bandeau style from Nobody's Child — I like the giant polka dot — would also do the job (£99, To quote Loren in Houseboat, 'Bing! Bang! Bong!' The originals are so minimally be-strapped and soled as barely to class as footwear, and would ideally be purchased from the famous Canfora on Capri itself (from £159, However, there are some great iterations on the high street. Free People's are almost as pared-back, in a range of colours (£88, while Nobody's Child has a brown version with a more pavement-ready sole (£115, Italians got on to these for their youth-bestowing magic long before we did. Me+Em's white turn-ups would do nicely (£136.50, reduced from £195, as would Sézane's black and cream check (£125, and — if you are up for more volume — Albaray's leopard culottes (£79, Wait and See Milano — a veritable jewel box of a boutique — has some red and white floral beauts too (€283, reduced from €403, One of the ways in which Italian women signal the arrival of summer — not that here, in my experience, it normally needs much signalling — is by putting away their usual leather handbag, which will be an expensive investment piece, for a more fun wicker or raffia style. I always look for a lined interior, so that it works in the city as well as by the sea. For a neat tote, try Bloom & Bay's Kiara (£44.95, but for one that really thinks like a handbag, complete with leather flap and crossbody strap, try Wicker Wings (£250, I am going to finish on what is perhaps my favourite aspect of Italian style: how they dress up even the simplest ensemble with a knockout piece (or two) of costume jewellery. My favourite hunting grounds at home include the vintage offerings at Felt, Eclectica and Susan Caplan. Mango also knows how to make a dolce vita-appropriate statement, to wit its chunky resin bead necklace in shades of amber and brown (£45.99,

Are Two-Piece Matching Sets Still Trendy?
Are Two-Piece Matching Sets Still Trendy?

New York Times

time14-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New York Times

Are Two-Piece Matching Sets Still Trendy?

The coordinated 'set,' known more colloquially as the co-ord set, that perfectly matching combination of top and bottom, has been part of the standard wardrobe for decades. What, after all, is a suit but a set with different vowels? It has, however, taken many forms over the years and ebbed and flowed in the public consciousness. The last time sets really became a thing was in the fall of 2021, after the Miu Miu show during Paris Fashion Week. That's when Miuccia Prada showed matching khaki or gray pleated micro-miniskirts and cropped jacket tops or cable knits, like a (yes) suit gone Britney Spears rogue. Before you could say 'social media catnip,' the Miu Miu set had gone stratospheric, worn by Nicole Kidman on the cover of Vanity Fair as well as influencers by the truckload, reinforcing Mrs. Prada's position as the most powerful female designer in fashion. It was not, however, the first set, and it certainly won't be the last. The Juicy Couture tracksuit, beloved of Los Angeles denizens and celebrities everywhere in the early aughts, was a set. The fact that the aughts are currently enjoying a style renaissance, along with the whole set concept, is probably not a coincidence. Before that, Cher Horowitz's yellow plaid suit in 'Clueless' was a set. The playsuit that rose to popularity in the 1960s was a set. In the 1920s, Coco Chanel loved a knit set, a coordinated cardigan and skirt inspired by clothing worn to play tennis and golf. Some historians trace the origins of the set back even further, to the 16th and 17th centuries, when men started wearing matching doublets and hose. As to why the set concept lasted so long, it's pretty simple. As the stylist Gabriella Karefa-Johnson told me when I asked, 'it makes life easier.' Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Strategic layering: The key to warm winter dressing
Strategic layering: The key to warm winter dressing

The Age

time11-07-2025

  • Lifestyle
  • The Age

Strategic layering: The key to warm winter dressing

This story is part of the July 12 edition of Good Weekend. See all 13 stories. Can I really get through winter with just one coat? In winter, forget traditional fashion wisdom and accept that more is more. Until ski suits become acceptable office attire, a minimalist approach to dressing won't keep you warm when arctic winds confront you on your commute to work. Rather than accept the challenge of winter dressing, most people simply give up, reach for the nearest black puffer jacket and place their bodies into style hibernation until the first sign of spring. Quitters. A bulky coat or jumper on its own is never the answer. You might be warm, but you won't look hot. While other people focus on preparing their bodies for summer, showcase your winter silhouette with strategic layering. A crisp business shirt, fitted jumper and sporty windbreaker keep the elements at bay without adding unnecessary bulk to your figure. The fit is important here: body skimming – not body-clinging – and never baggy. Careful layering has a dynamic result, taking the eye on a journey around an outfit without settling for too long in one area. Like Miu Miu designer Miuccia Prada, take inspiration from school uniforms where contrasting colours unite for a style A+. Stop short at wearing a school tie – you don't want to look like an actual student – and elevate your accessories with a leather tote or messenger bag in place of a backpack. If you're wearing a longer skirt, you might be able to tolerate the wind against your calves; if it's just too icy, though, turn to tights. Meanwhile, underlining your outfit with a cool socks-and-stilettos combo will signal that ultimate layering mastery has been reached.

Strategic layering: The key to warm winter dressing
Strategic layering: The key to warm winter dressing

Sydney Morning Herald

time11-07-2025

  • Lifestyle
  • Sydney Morning Herald

Strategic layering: The key to warm winter dressing

This story is part of the July 12 edition of Good Weekend. See all 13 stories. Can I really get through winter with just one coat? In winter, forget traditional fashion wisdom and accept that more is more. Until ski suits become acceptable office attire, a minimalist approach to dressing won't keep you warm when arctic winds confront you on your commute to work. Rather than accept the challenge of winter dressing, most people simply give up, reach for the nearest black puffer jacket and place their bodies into style hibernation until the first sign of spring. Quitters. A bulky coat or jumper on its own is never the answer. You might be warm, but you won't look hot. While other people focus on preparing their bodies for summer, showcase your winter silhouette with strategic layering. A crisp business shirt, fitted jumper and sporty windbreaker keep the elements at bay without adding unnecessary bulk to your figure. The fit is important here: body skimming – not body-clinging – and never baggy. Careful layering has a dynamic result, taking the eye on a journey around an outfit without settling for too long in one area. Like Miu Miu designer Miuccia Prada, take inspiration from school uniforms where contrasting colours unite for a style A+. Stop short at wearing a school tie – you don't want to look like an actual student – and elevate your accessories with a leather tote or messenger bag in place of a backpack. If you're wearing a longer skirt, you might be able to tolerate the wind against your calves; if it's just too icy, though, turn to tights. Meanwhile, underlining your outfit with a cool socks-and-stilettos combo will signal that ultimate layering mastery has been reached.

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