Lana Condor wore a black strapless floor‑length gown with a sheer hem detail at Variety and Golden Globes Pre‑Party in Beverly Hills 2026.
At Variety and Golden Globes Pre‑Party in Beverly Hills on January 9 2026, Lana Condor arrived in a sleek interpretation of classic eveningwear. A black strapless gown fit sharp through the bodice before relaxing into a loose translucent hem that brushed the floor. From a distance the dress reads minimal, but up close the texture shows thin tonal pinstripes that break its surface quietly.
Lili Reinhart wore a black Dsquared2 viscose crepe waves bustier maxi gown with a high slit at Variety and Golden Globes Pre-Party 2026.
At Variety and Golden Globes Pre-Party in Beverly Hills on January 9 2026, Lili Reinhart appeared in an arresting study of contrast and control. Her Dsquared2 viscose crepe Waves Bustier Maxi Gown carved out the waist with a structured corset silhouette before falling into a long column skirt that cut open at the thigh. The bustline, slightly sculptural with sheer lace underlay, gave the black fabric a trace of delicacy under the rigour.
Madison Beer posed in a dark sheer top and high-waisted corset briefs with nude tights for her February 2026 Dork Magazine photoshoot.
In this Dork Magazine editorial for February 2026, Madison Beer is photographed reclining on a pale vintage sofa, all shadow and stillness. She wears a sheer black long-sleeve top tucked into a sculpted corset brief that defines her waist, paired with nude tights — slightly distressed, almost torn at the knees. That imperfection makes the scene interesting, pulling it away from gloss into something slower, rougher.
Her hair is left long and straight, almost spilling over the sofa edge. The room is quiet, washed in daylight from an unseen source. The tones are soft: beige, navy, skin. The positioning is deliberate but not frozen — a magazine fashion photoshoot chasing intimacy instead of distance.
It’s sensual without excess, reflective rather than posed. Madison Beer looks like she’s thinking mid-frame, not performing — and that feels rare enough to count as style.