Isabela Merced and her sister flaunt casual chic and coordinating looks at the Shakira: Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran World Tour. We break down the ’90s-inspired street style looks and analyze the subtle nods to sisterhood and Y2K fashion.
There is an art to concert style, a delicate dance between expressing your personal flair and honoring the artist you’ve come to see. A good outfit should feel effortless, comfortable enough to dance in, yet cool enough to be captured by a sea of flashing phone cameras. And last night, at Shakira’s Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran World Tour at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California, Isabela Merced and her sister, Gypsy, executed this art form with a quiet, confident cool that felt both nostalgic and utterly now.
Emma Myers channels a cool-girl ’90s vibe, parading a look of subtle rebellion with a cropped button-up and low-slung, ultra-wide jeans.
In the heart of Midtown, where the noise and chaos of New York City can overwhelm even the most seasoned style maven, Emma Myers offered a moment of quiet, confident nostalgia yesterday, August 4, 2025. It was a look that felt both like a throwback and a whisper of things to come, a kind of elegant deconstruction that I, for one, found utterly charming.
Supermodels Candice Swanepoel and Joan Smalls are the faces of Anne Klein’s Fall 2025 campaign, celebrating the elegance of women who uplift each other. The real-life best friends showcase tailored separates and chic accessories, proving that the most powerful accessory is friendship.
Ah, there is nothing quite like a well-tailored suit. It’s an unspoken language, a nod to both masculine power and feminine grace, a concept my nonna first taught me as a child, showing me photos of her in impeccable suits from the ’50s. And now, seeing Candice Swanepoel and Joan Smalls in the new Anne Klein campaign for Fall 2025… it feels like that same spirit, but with a thoroughly modern, very New York twist. It’s not just fashion; it’s a statement about solidarity, about women celebrating women.