Alexis Oakley wore a black corset top, lace tights, and stilettos at The One Party by Uber in San Francisco on February 6, 2026.
Alexis Oakley showed up to The One Party by Uber in San Francisco with an outfit that said: I’m here, I’m built for flash photography, and I didn’t overthink it. The yellow carpet was chaotic, but she kept it clean—and bold.
She wore a black asymmetric corset with a slight peplum flare and a deep curved neckline—structured but not harsh, with visible seams and a subtle unfinished edge vibe. Paired it with black mini shorts , barely visible under the hemline when photographed head-on, which makes the transition into the legs feel instant.
And let’s talk about the legs—fully covered in sheer black lace tights , the kind that instantly turn a basic mini moment into something with personality. No pattern mixing. No sparkle. Just tactile texture. The lace adds just enough excess. Matched with classic glossy black pointed stilettos , everything is cinched, lifted, extended.
Hair was loose, glossy, carved into subtle waves. Her makeup leaned warm-toned—bronzed lids, overlined nude lips, fresh but not fussy. No dress. No gown. Just the kind of event appearance that says, “I read the room—then decided to make it smaller.”
This was well executed. Nothing caught between trends. Nothing screaming. Just confident fabrics and clarity of vibe.
Bottom line: When lace tights carry this much weight, the rest of the outfit needs to get out of the way—and that’s exactly what it did.
Claudia Jordan wore a tailored black pantsuit with a gold chain necklace and striped clutch at the 57th NAACP Image Awards Brunch.
There’s something quietly confident about showing up to an award-season brunch in a black suit — and Claudia Jordan clearly got the memo. At the 57th NAACP Image Awards Nominees Brunch in Los Angeles, she opted for structure rather than shimmer, and it works.
The look is all clean tailoring: a fitted blazer fastened with a single gold button, layered over a matching straight-cut top and slim trousers that flare lightly at the hem. The tailored lines hold firm without feeling rigid — it’s a suit with ease. The gold statement necklace loops elegantly across her neckline, adding polish and a bit of personality.
A black-and-white striped clutch gives the outfit rhythm — bold enough to catch the eye, but still classic. Open-toe heels finish it off with a grounded kind of polish. I think this is the kind of outfit that reminds people that simplicity isn’t the absence of style. It’s the control of it.
Now, if you’ve got a semi-formal event appearance in your future — charity brunch, press panel, or even a brand launch — this formula works. Monochrome base, one accent detail, confident tailoring. It’s wearable in the real world and photograph-ready without fuss.
To me, this is what modern red-carpet calm looks like — no need to shout when the fit already says everything.
Chantel Jeffries wore a bold red Saint Laurent halterneck jumpsuit with an Oura Ring Gen3 at the 2026 Fanatics Super Bowl Party.
If you ask me, red on the red carpet takes real confidence, and Chantel Jeffries didn’t hold back at the Fanatics Super Bowl Party in San Francisco. She went for something daring but controlled — a Saint Laurent halterneck jumpsuit in a saturated, almost signal‑flare red that’s impossible to ignore.
The cut is classic Saint Laurent: sharp lines meeting body-conscious tailoring. The deep halter plunge and center ring cut‑out create a balance between bold and sculpted, while the stretch fabric hugs smoothly without leaning costume. The fit at the waist is relaxed just enough to keep it from feeling too engineered. She paired it with sleek black knee‑high boots — a practical move that grounds the intensity of the color.
Jewelry stayed restrained: the Oura Ring Gen3 in Heritage Silver catches just a flash of light, a tech‑meets-fashion detail that fits her usual low‑key futuristic vibe. Hair down, parted center, slightly undone — it keeps the whole look real, not red‑carpet stiff. If you ask me, the boots make it: they give the whole look grip, literally and stylistically.
For an event appearance like this, it’s a smart call — enough glamour for the cameras but still party‑floor friendly. The color pops under bright lighting, and the silhouette hits the sweet spot between daring and wearable.
I think this is her signature lane: confident, clean, and a little bit calculated — in the best possible way.