Bella Poarch wore a strapless layered red tulle gown and matching opera gloves to the Go Red for Women event in New York on January 29.

At the American Heart Association’s Go Red for Women Red Dress Collection Concert in New York, Bella Poarch gave us full fairytale drama—with edge. She looked like a rose in full bloom, if that rose had tattoos and didn’t care if it was being watched.

The dress was floor-length, strapless, and completely consumed in layered shades of red tulle , ranging from bright cherry to soft pink undertones peeking near the hem. The gown’s bodice was ruched diagonally, creating structure without stiffness, and the skirt poured outward in a glowing, almost translucent flood. But the real punctuation came from the left side—draped with sculptural fabric rosettes, growing up and out of the hip like petals mid-motion.

She wore matching tulle opera gloves , fingertip-length and fitted, which gave the look cohesion, but also let it lean slightly surreal—like she wandered out of a Renaissance painting halfway through and decided to make it punk. The styling was minimal elsewhere—no necklace, no excess. Long, softly curled waves fell over her shoulders. Her ink peeks out like an afterthought—but it never is.

The makeup was quietly glam. Rounded eye, fluffy brow, diffuse lip. Nothing overdrawn, nothing showy. It was softness held in tension. And that tension? Makes it memorable.

Bella Poarch at Go Red for Women Concert in NYC 01-29-2026 - 1 Bella Poarch at Go Red for Women Concert in NYC 01-29-2026 - 2 Bella Poarch at Go Red for Women Concert in NYC 01-29-2026 - 3 Bella Poarch at Go Red for Women Concert in NYC 01-29-2026 - 4 Bella Poarch at Go Red for Women Concert in NYC 01-29-2026 - 5 Bella Poarch at Go Red for Women Concert in NYC 01-29-2026 - 6 Bella Poarch at Go Red for Women Concert in NYC 01-29-2026 - 7 Bella Poarch at Go Red for Women Concert in NYC 01-29-2026 - 8 Bella Poarch at Go Red for Women Concert in NYC 01-29-2026 - 9

Dixie D’Amelio wore a sheer black lace catsuit and corset top to the 2026 Spotify Best New Artist event in West Hollywood on January 29.

At Spotify’s 2026 Best New Artist event in West Hollywood, Dixie D’Amelio walked the black carpet dressed like a haunted silhouette—provocative, exact, a little spooky, a lot intentional.

She wore a fully sheer black lace catsuit , clinging ultra-tight, no opacity, no hiding. The lace is floral, delicate but stretching with purpose, revealing without stumbling into chaos. It’s one of those pieces that doesn’t need volume or cutouts—it participates by exposure alone. Over the top: a sculpted black corset , full boning structure, matte satin texture, cups outlined but not bulky. The kind of corset that shapes but doesn’t dominate. It keeps the lines sharp. Especially against all that soft lace.

The catsuit has elbow-length flutter sleeves, giving it an unexpected softness. A shrugging motion disguised as tailoring. And the fit? From neckline to ankle, it’s body-map precision. She styled it with pointed black stilettos , patent pumps with thin heels, barely visible from under the lace hem.

Her hair was styled voluminously with a tall, soft bouffant bun, face-framing strands staying out in that perfectly-messed-up way that screams retro but doesn’t feel playful. The glam? Smoky around the eyes, nude lip, contoured jawline. Earring-less. Bracelet-less. No accessories except her presence—which is a statement piece all its own.

Dixie D’Amelio at Spotify Best New Artist Event in 2026 - 10 Dixie D’Amelio at Spotify Best New Artist Event in 2026 - 11

In a room full of color-blocking, trend-chasing, and TikTok-neutral-safe-bets, Dixie went full visual risk. This look is high-concept street style meets lingerie editorial , but done without apology. She didn’t pull back on coverage for shock value—she leaned into construction. There’s a method under the skin, literally. It’s about silhouette and friction—not glamour.

Olivia Rodrigo wore a Valentino pink bow-trim mini dress and Louboutin platforms for her Resonator Awards studio portrait on January 27, 2026.

For her portrait ahead of the Resonator Awards, Olivia Rodrigo did something she’s become quietly great at—show up looking sweet, sharp, and just slightly out of reach.

She wore a delicate Valentino pink silk mini dress , styled with visible intention and nothing extra. The fitted bodice, ruched horizontally, gave subtle structure without cinching too tight. But it’s the three black velvet bows slicing across the front that did the real talking. They sit like punctuation—one under the bust, one across the waist, and a final one hovering just above the hips. It gives the whole look a stacked ribbon effect, like she’s giftwrapped in punctuation marks.

The silhouette was sleek, stopping mid-thigh, no frills at the hem, just clean lines. The neckline dips into a soft V, supported by whisper-thin straps—almost invisible against her skin, just there enough to hold the dress up.