All the fun and glamorus looks from Vogue World 2025, Read further to know all the looks that’s everyone’s been talking about.
When Hollywood and haute couture collide, the result is pure magic and elegance. At Vogue World 2025: Hollywood, stars swapped their movie scripts for designer masterpieces, turning the Paramount Pictures Studios Lot into a living, breathing fashion film set. The night celebrated the classic old-school glamour with a modern twist, and every look told its own story.
Maitreyi Ramakrishnan embraced her culutural roots in a stunning Manish Malhotra piece. Her look featured a pearl-studded sculpted bodice and a gold brocade skirt that radiated vintage elegance. A sheer embellished veil added a modern-day that give very elegannt ghungat touch. Rhinestone heels, Cartier ear clips, and a delicate nose ring completed her regal look. With sleek, side-parted hair and soft glam makeup, Maitreyi reestablished cross-cultural couture.
Dakota Johnson in Valentino
Dakota Johnson turned heads in a dreamy blush-pink Valentino gown designed by Alessandro Michele. The dress featured crystal floral appliqués and a tulle neckline that shimmered with every move. True to her signature style, Dakota kept it minimal, straight hair, wispy bangs, dewy skin, and simple drop earrings paired with a sleek black clutch.
Miley Cyrus in Saint Laurent
Miley Cyrus in Saint Laurent spring26 rtw styled by Bradley Kenneth for Vogue World pic.twitter.com/UzXNkugG7f
Miley Cyrus brought rock ‘n’ roll energy to the carpet in head-to-toe Saint Laurent. Her oversized trench, cinched at the waist over a crisp white shirt, was a bold nod to androgynous power dressing. Leather gloves, a biker cap, sheer tights, and pointed slingbacks added that signature Miley attitude, edgy, fearless, and effortlessly cool.
Madison Beer in Valentino
Madison Beer served up 90s nostalgia in a vintage black-and-white Valentino mini dress. The playful piece, complete with a dramatic bow, was paired with strappy sandals and minimal jewellery. Her soft waves and rosy makeup made the look feel fresh and timeless.
Hailey Bieber brought drama and chaos in a custom Mugler leather dress from the Spring/Summer 2026 runway. The off-shoulder silhouette and bold cut-outs showed off her signature confidence, while a sculpted leather rosette added a touch of artistry and made her look like a dream.
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Chlöe has us feeling blessed. On Aug. 6, the singer stepped out in a dreamy cutout Mugler gown to celebrate Dwyane Wade’s Hall of Fame induction with FWRD. The white bodycon dress featured long sleeves and intricate mesh panels skimming across her hips, waist, and chest for an exaggerated hourglass effect. She kept the high-fashion look minimal, pulling her hair back and accessorizing with metallic hoop earrings, a chain necklace, and several rings. She offered fans another glimpse at her dress on TikTok, staring at herself in the mirror while her song “Body Do” played in the background.
Chlöe’s outfit seemed especially appropriate following her sister’s debut single “Angel,” which dropped Aug. 4. Whether she was directly inspired by the lyrics or still had angels on her mind, the 25-year-old star looked heavenly on the carpet. This gown is definitely among her more daring looks, playing into the naked dress trend popularized by celebrities like Rihanna and Jennifer Lopez.
Just a few weeks ago, Chlöe experimented with far more cutouts at the Legends Carnival in St. Lucia, celebrating in multiple strappy bodysuits with crystallized details. Previously, she also performed in a sheer catsuit with cutouts all across the bodice and even wore bold hip cutouts for the 2022 Billboard Music Awards. Read ahead to see how Chlöe made such a daring trend look so elegant for her latest red carpet appearance.
I must tell you, I’m not usually one to change the type of perfume I wear seasonally. Call me a creature of habit, but once I fall in love with a fragrance, I will wear it year-round, regardless of whether it fits that season’s mood. However, that doesn’t mean I dislike scents traditionally associated with fall. There’s something about a crisp breeze in the air and taking my favorite sweaters out of storage that makes me want to smell warm, cozy, and even a bit earthy.
The rest of the Who What Wear beauty team seems to agree. We’re ready to share the new perfumes we’re excited to spritz on for the fall season. For all our picks, keep reading. Lots of variety ahead!
One of the most elusive parts about luxury fashion brands like Louis Vuitton, Mugler, or Dior is that they don’t produce their clothing in a timely manner with cheaper fabrics to fit trends. They dictate the trends, while fast fashion brands like Shein, Forever 21, and H&M rush to copy them. Fast fashion is always more affordable, but is equally guaranteed to fall apart within three washes.
Mugler is known for their architectural style. Think corsets, broad shoulders, and cinched waists – it’s about illusions and futuristic looks, and Thierry Mugler’s visions have been worn by celebrities like Cardi B and Bella Hadid on red carpets and runways across the world. And now, they’ve decided to collaborate with fast fashion’s finest: H&M.
It’s a bit of a peculiar mashup that doesn’t quite make sense. While I love the preview of the H&Mugler collection, which drops May 11, I can’t help but wonder why it’s happening. First of all, fast fashion is controversial on its own. Bad for the environment, bad conditions for their workers, bad materials, bad everything.
But to attach Mugler’s precious luxury name to fast fashion is eyebrow-raising. H&M has some of the lowest-priced clothing available in your local mall, while Mugler is often sold in standalone stores surrounded by Gucci and St. Laurent buildings. However, for this collection, they’re said to be meeting in the middle, price-wise.
Mugler’s creative director Casey Cadwallader has designed the collection to stay true to Mugler while bringing it into the homes of those who can’t normally afford the brand’s steep pricing.
“I was determined for this collection to be true Mugler. The details and quality of every piece had to be exactly as we do them, and I wanted to showcase the energy of Mugler, which has always been about clothes that allow for personal liberation. You can be so many different versions of yourself in Mugler.”
This collaboration isn’t that surprising for H&M, who has had several successful luxury collaborations in the past with brands like Karl Lagerfeld, Versace, and Kenzo. For this Mugler collab, H&M was looking to hone in on the silhouette-hugging, confidence-inducing Mugler classic look.
“We are proud to celebrate the legacy of Manfred Thierry Mugler with this collection,” says Ann-Sofie Johansson, creative advisor at H&M. “We were all honored to get to know Manfred, and it feels very special that he was involved at the initial stages together with Casey and the house of Mugler. Casey has done such an incredible job at paying homage to history, and to the archive while making the collection totally contemporary. Under him, Mugler has become one of the most innovative and exciting houses on today’s fashion landscape.”
Thierry Mugler was a favorite among all celebrities. He returned from a 20-year hiatus in 2019 to create Kim Kardashian’s wet Met Gala look. After passing away last January, this collab is said to honor Mugler’s iconic looks in his memory.
When Manfred Thierry Mugler passed away last year, he was in the early stages of a new project. A collaboration with H&M—one that will bring the ultra-viral, outré brand to a wider audience—was one of the last things the iconic designer worked on with Casey Cadwallader, Mugler’s creative director. “It was so great that we knew that he wanted to do it and that he was so excited about it. That gave us something to have in our hearts. We wanted to do this really well for him,” the youthful and energetic Cadwallader, a New Hampshire native, says during an interview at a Paris showroom.
Courtesy of the designer
When Mugler first made a splash in the ’80s and ’90s, his shows were filled with statuesque and often boundary-breaking models: Grace Jones, Connie Fleming, Naomi Campbell. His casting was a move forward for fashion in terms of race, age, and gender expression, and strikingly innovative for its time. Cadwallader, who became creative director in 2017, has seen interest in Mugler skyrocket in recent years and understands the outsize role the brand plays in pop culture today. Clients like Cardi B, Kim Kardashian, and Beyoncé have helped Mugler’s sexy and avant-garde looks become recognizable worldwide. (Thierry Mugler: Couturissime, an exhibition of Mugler’s work, is currently on view at the Brooklyn Museum.)
Carlijn Jacobs
Cadwallader knows that working with H&M will give young fans an opportunity to wear Mugler for the first time, and he sees great meaning in the chance to be a part of that. “This is going to have so much more visibility than Mugler does itself,” he says. H&M agrees. “The idea with collaborations is to offer customers a designed piece they maybe couldn’t afford any other way,” says creative advisor Ann-Sofie Johansson.
Courtesy of the designer
The success of the 109-piece collection—which comes out next month and includes womenswear, menswear, and accessories—hinged on being able to recreate the high-quality fabrics and meticulous attention to detail that go into Mugler’s architectural silhouettes on a much larger scale. It was Cadwallader’s biggest concern, and something he felt increasingly assured of as he went further along in the design process with H&M. The company’s greater production capacity and broader ability to source materials allowed the line to maintain the brand’s integrity at a more accessible price. “A lot of the fabrics are the same ones that I use. And in some cases they’ve been developed to be more sustainable or to go for a better price without giving up on the technicalities, which has been so nice,” he says. Among the archival pieces Cadwallader included was an update of Mugler’s 1981 Vampire dress, a cocktail number that was worn by Dua Lipa on Saturday Night Live and seen on HBO’s Euphoria. “It’s so much about the body as a sculpture,” he says.
Casey Cadwallader and Ann-Sofie Johansson.
Carlijn Jacobs
Production methods weren’t the only adjustments to be made in order to welcome slightly less adventurous dressers into the world of Mugler. Many of his designs “are so bold that they push the edge of wearability, and I’m very happy and proud to do that. But with this collaboration, I knew where to control things and where to rein it in,” Cadwallader says. That meant creating pieces with a bit more coverage and pared-back details. “It was about thinking about how to keep the essence but simplify things for more mass appeal and accessibility, where people wouldn’t be put off. In fashion circles, you can make the craziest thing and everyone’s like, ‘Let’s give it a try.’ But I want someone who doesn’t know what Mugler is to see it and be like, ‘I can wear this.’”
A version of this article appears in the April 2023 issue of ELLE.
After a three-year hiatus, Mugler is back on the runway — and with quite the star-studded cast.
Ziwe made her catwalk debut at the brand’s Fall 2023 show, donning a lacy black set, featuring a mini skirt and long-sleeved bolero, with tall leather boots, matching black lipstick and hair pulled back into a high ponytail. (Was she a Mugler exclusive this season? Either way, she made for quite an iconic guest.) Also modeling the collection was Casey Cadwallader favorite Dominique Jackson, musician Arca and fashion week regular Paloma Elsesser, as well as industry titans Amber Valletta, Eva Herzigova and Debra Shaw.
Per WWD, a representative from Mugler stated that this wasn’t “a classical return to the runway.” Its latest stays true to the label’s definitive style and the direction Cadwallader has taken the brand, with its architectural shapes, broad shoulders, cinched waists and futuristic fabrics. Fall 2023 has bodysuits, dresses, corsets and lingerie, all enhanced by sharp tailoring and revealing mesh cutouts.
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While Mugler has been on a fashion week runway hiatus until now, the brand’s presence has hardly left the cultural zeitgeist, with the Couturissime exhibition opening in New York and celebrities like Kylie Jenner continuing to embrace its expansive archive.
These are the stories making headlines in fashion on Monday.
W releases Best Performances issue W Magazine has released the annual Best Performances feature, curated by Lynn Hirschberg, featuring the likes of Taylor Russell, Margot Robbie, Austin Butler, Michelle Yeoh and more. A total of 14 actors nabbed covers (see above) and discuss their most notable and anticipated roles, sharing exclusive details on their processes and more. {W Magazine}
Mugler will return to the runway this month After a three-year hiatus from live presentations, Mugler is returning to the runway. Designer Casey Cadwallader, who has turned to fashion films in recent years, will show a new collection in Paris on Jan. 26, the last day of couture week. The collection will be a “see now, buy now” concept, described by Mugler as an “immersive experience across all channels, and in front of a live audience.” {WWD}
Sothebys to sell one of Princess Diana’s dresses On Jan. 27, the auction house Sothebys will sell the purple Victor Edelstein gown that Princess Diana wore in her official portrait in 1991, as well as in a Vanity Fair spread shot by Mario Testino in 1997 — the same year as her tragic passing. The dress will be sold as part of ‘The One’ sale, “which features an unprecedented selection of the finest products of human culture, achievement and history,” according to Sothebys. {@sothebys/Instagram}
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Photo: Courtesy of Sézane
Sézane resurrects classic styles for 10th anniversary To mark the 10-year anniversary of the brand, Sézane has released a homage-filled capsule collection dedicated to archival pieces that represent the brand best. The collection features classic styles in new pastel colors and consists of 107 pieces, including knitwear, bags, footwear, denim and more. The collection is available to shop now at Sezane.com. {Fashionista inbox}
Homepage Photos: Courtesy of W Magazine/Collage by Brooke Frischer
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The first time Casey Cadwallader saw “Thierry Mugler: Couturissime” — the buzzy museum retrospective tracing the highly influential founding designer’s career — it was still the early days of his tenure as creative director of Mugler. (He joined the house in December 2017.)
“To see such a tour de force of his best things all side by side made me a little bit jittery,” he says, adding with sarcasm, “I was like, ‘Oh cool, this looks easy.’”
The exhibit first opened at the Musée des Beaux Arts de Montréal in the spring of 2019, and has since traveled to Rotterdam, Munich and Paris. “Couturissime” is making its final stop stateside at the Brooklyn Museum, from this Friday, Nov. 18 to May 7, 2023. Even now, though, that nervous, “fear-inducing” wonder is still there for Cadwallader.
“I went and I was like, ‘Damn, this is intense,’” he says.
“Thierry Mugler: Couturissime” makes its fifth and final stop at the Brooklyn Museum.
Photo: Courtesy of Brooklyn Museum
Cadwallader is nearing his five-year anniversary at Mugler — a massive milestone for any designer, but especially one helming an iconic fashion house; it’s a position with famously high turnover. A lot has happened during his tenure: In addition to reigniting interest in the brand, he’s also made it a go-to for some of the most sought-after performers in the world, like Dua Lipa, Megan thee Stallion and Beyoncé. Meanwhile, its extensive archive has become a popular resource for celebrities like Cardi B and Kylie Jenner to pull from for big events. Then, more recently, Thierry Mugler passed away.
“I was much more in contact with him, and that was something I earned over time,” Cadwallader says of Mugler, the man. “I had no idea that he was going to pass — no one did — so there was this amazing shock about, ‘Oh, these conversations that were going to happen now aren’t going to happen,’ which was really hard.”
“The other thing [is], he was always watching,” he continues. “He was always on the sidelines, and I was always thinking about that. Now that he’s passed, there’s this really big shift where I more deeply understand my responsibility to take it forward. It’s not that it wasn’t that way before, but without him being there, it feels different. I really feel responsible for making the brand lasting, making the brand stronger, making the brand bigger, making sure that the brand’s past is respected.”
Cadwallader himself is a reverent student of the archive: As soon as he got to Mugler, he’d pull different pieces and examine them one by one. Even now, he’ll go back to the source material — but he’s very intentional about how he uses it.
“I made this deal with myself that I would look at it, take pictures, put it away and just let it come out of me the way that felt natural — that’s my way of making sure that it’s my version,” he says. “I realized [the archive] was so extensive and there are so many different themes and ideas and materialities that I prefer to let my nose point in one direction, fall in love with something for a season — one, two, three things max — and digest those.”
For example, Cadwallader might start with an embroidered corset from a decades-old haute couture collection. Through his lens, that inspiration becomes the starting point for a ready-to-wear corset made with “a laser-cut, ultrasonically-welded lycra, where it breathes and stretches almost like sport clothing.”
“What I’m trying to do,” he says, “is to bring those codes and make it much more wearable day to day… There’s something interesting about shifting that materiality and the language that makes it hit people differently now.”
A look from Casey Cadwallader’s Fall 2021 collection for Mugler.
Photo: Imaxtree
Even that technique ties Cadwallader’s work to that of the man whose name is on the tag: “He was obsessed with new materials. He did entire shows dedicated to faux fur or lycra or latex or whatever it was that was new — now, I’m just trying to do the same with what’s offered to me in the modern world.”
Renewed public interest in a fashion house’s archive can be a tricky thing if the brand’s still up and running. There’s a risk that the storied history might eclipse the current vision. In the case of Mugler, though, the Casey Cadwallader era and the Thierry Mugler revival have coexisted, each attracting attention and renown in its own right — a rare, but obviously advantageous, phenomenon.
“The thing for me is that I love the archives so much and I respect it so much that I want everyone to know about it,” he says. “I’m also not the kind of designer who came in and just did what I wanted. I became Casey at Mugler — I totally transformed myself because of that archive. I really believe in what the brand was in the past and that should be a lot of what it is in the future. Luckily, we got along, the archive and I.”
Another through-line that connects Cadwallader to Mugler, the person, is a love of performance and performers, and centering them in their work. Dressing and designing for music artists was one of Cadwallader’s priorities at the house — so much so, that he canceled pre-collections in favor of “special projects,” like costuming a tour or working on music videos. So, Mugler only shows two seasons annually, spring and fall; the rest you see on stage.
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“It says so much the way someone moves, the fact that they’re performing — it exudes this sexy confidence,” he says.
Megan thee Stallion has become a frequent collaborator of Cadwallader’s, often wearing his Mugler designs on stage, like at the 2022 Billboard Music Awards.
Photo: Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images for MRC
It’s paid off for the brand, too: Mugler has gone viral time and time again for its custom looks for Dua Lipa’s tours, its ongoing relationship with Megan Thee Stallion (Cadwallader even directed the music video for “Plan B”) and many other artist collaborations.
“It presents itself as a calling card for the brand, because then people identify the aesthetics of the things that these people wear,” he says. “I tried very carefully to interweave things, so that if you love Dua Lipa’s couture outfit with 200,000 crystals on it, you might also like the leggings that don’t have the crystals. It’s trying to always make sure that when we put all that effort into those stage projects, there’s something about the collection that’s there.”
This kind of work — which Cadwallader dubs “the new couture” — “serves as my laboratory,” he says, “my no-limits, what-do-you-want-to-do thing, instead of the can-we-sell-this part of my brain.” It’s also something he takes very seriously.
“If you imagine, ‘Okay, this is for Beyoncé — she better be able to dance,’ because I’m not gonna be responsible for her not being able to dance,” he says. “It’s the same thing as doing someone’s wedding gown: You’re going to try your very best because you’re giving this piece of work to someone’s really important moment. It becomes a real love.” (Cadwallader created a major after-party look for Chloë Sevigny’s wedding in May.)
There are a few things that make a Mugler piece a Mugler piece. For one, Cadwallader believes it “should be identifiable from across the street.” There are the aesthetic signatures, but it goes much deeper than that.
“There’s an attitude to it that has to stay for me,” he says. “The big thing overall is that Mugler is supposed to induce confidence. It’s supposed to be something that you don’t feel just so-so about. You’re supposed to touch it and be like, ‘Oh my God, this is crazy. This is so exciting.’ By putting it on, you’re not just being you right in the middle — you’re being super-sonic you.”
Historically for the house, that has meant emphasizing the body. More specifically, it’s about “this very strong respect for the body, to always try to highlight it and make it look as strong as possible,” according to Cadwallader. “That doesn’t mean you have to have a certain figure. It means that you have to love your figure and how to work with it. There are simple things you can say, like a jacket shoulder has to be strong, the waist has to be nipped, the hip has to be curvy — but more than it being about those specifics, it’s more about the feeling that it gives you: very sensual, excited, understanding of yourself.”
Materiality and silhouette are two characteristics that tie Cadwallader’s Mugler back to the house’s founder.
Photo: Courtesy of the Brooklyn Museum
He’s done it so far with his Mugler ready-to-wear, which heavily leans on the form-fitting and the corseted, often working with a restrained color palette to really emphasize the garment and its silhouette.
“What I’ve been trying to do over these years is to be very, very strong with the aesthetics of what I’m doing so that they’re very shocking and bare and special and thought-provoking,” Cadwallader says. “Eventually, there’s a lot of room to expand that DNA into things that are slightly easier to wear.”
There’s a lot on his dream board: accessories, swimwear, underwear, makeup… And as always, he’s turning to the archive for inspiration.
“I’m really into decadent and wild textures,” he says. “I’ve been looking at the things that are a little bit more mysterious what they’re really made out of, so the ‘Chimère’ fish person with all the different colors [on display at ‘Couturissime’] is fascinating to me at the moment.”
Don’t be surprised if you spot Cadwallader at the Brooklyn Museum (though, probably not for research): “My favorite thing to do is to watch people walk through and hear what they’re saying,” he says. “There’s a lot of people who have no idea who I am. I’ll follow this nice older couple through, and the things that they say are just hilarious.”
Having the last stop of “Couturissime” be New York is “really meaningful,” especially when considering Mugler, the man, and his legacy, Cadwallader argues.
“It’s a city that was really important to Manfred — he lived here for 15 years, and it’s always been a big inspiration for him,” he says. “There’s nothing like seeing it in person. It does its own dazzling.”