Meghan Markle wore a custom Harbison strapless gown with a velvet cape and Stuart Weitzman heels to the 2026 Fifteen Percent Pledge Gala.
Meghan Markle doesn’t just dress for the moment — she understands the message. At the 2026 Fifteen Percent Pledge Gala held at Paramount Studios, she arrived in a look that was elegant without panic, structured without being overworked.
The custom Harbison Studio gown was built on precision: a strapless silhouette in soft dove pink, with a jet-black velvet trim that sharply cut across the neckline. Tailored clean through the hips, the dress held its shape without clinging, falling straight into a dramatic black velvet cape train — not attached, just draped over the arms like a living accessory. It moved in silence behind her, absorbing light instead of reflecting it.
On her feet? Stuart Weitzman Nudist Sandals in black suede — minimalist, barely there, exactly what the dress needed. Classic. Controlled. Visible just enough to sharpen the whole posture.
No glitz, no brand overload. Jewelry was minimal — her Cleave & Company diamond engagement ring and black drop earrings. Hair slicked back into a clean center-part bun. Makeup softly sculpted, nude-toned and exact.
As a celebrity look , this one worked because it respected its own space. Meghan didn’t fight for attention; she arrived with the calm of someone who already has it.
Final note: some dresses whisper money. This one whispers power.
Lady Gaga wore a custom blue ruffled Luar gown and red heels while performing at the 2026 Super Bowl LX halftime show in Santa Clara.
There’s no such thing as subtle when it comes to a Lady Gaga performance. Especially not at something like the Super Bowl LX halftime show , where the stakes are high, the crowd is massive, and you’ve got 13 minutes to make fashion history before the next whistle.
She did what she does best — took a risk, and made it look like muscle memory.
Onstage at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Gaga appeared in a custom powder blue Luar gown — sleeveless, sharply pleated, and tiered from the waist down in graphic-cut ruffles that screamed volume without being heavy. It was movement-ready, stage-built. You could tell the dress was designed to bounce with her hips.
The color: innocent. The silhouette: sharp. The styling: one twist at a time. Gaga paired the pastel softness with candy apple red heels , deliberate and loud — and somehow exactly the right contrast. You want clean harmony? Look elsewhere. This was disco-meets-teatro, and she sold it with intention.
Her signature platinum hair was waved and sculpted into retro bombshell glam. Mic in hand. Pose locked. Confidence dialed beyond what most red carpet gowns can handle.
And then — the detail that shouldn’t work but totally did — a bold corsage-style shoulder appliqué , half-flower, half-drama. It landed heavy on the look but not the moment.
Final note? Leave it to Gaga to deliver a fashion moment mid-performance that outdressed half the night.
Alix Earle wore a green Gucci leather jacket, mini skirt, Le Specs sunglasses, and vintage boots to the Fanatics Super Bowl Party 2026.
Alix Earle isn’t easing into Super Bowl weekend—she’s coming in sharp, zipped, and era-specific. At the 2026 Fanatics Super Bowl Party in San Francisco, she rolled up in Tom Ford-era Gucci and made it look born for the moment.
Let’s start with the green leather jacket . It’s from Gucci’s Tom Ford Fall 1999 collection , and you can feel it. The structure is precise: cinched through the waist with full-length zipper detailing and that signature ruched center. It hits at the hips for that slightly cropped effect, chic but grounded. It feels both archival and straight off the street.
From there, she kept it brutally simple. A black micro mini skirt , flat, no embellishment, just enough fabric. Legs bare except for a vintage finish: Gucci knee-high boots , pointed toe, mid-heel, tight to the calf—total ’90s energy. It’s very club kid with standards . The boots do a lot of lifting here, literally and contextually.
The best part? The head tilt framed by Le Specs Star Beam sunglasses in Matte Black Smoke Mono —oval, retro-inspired, straight-faced. They sit low on her nose like the flashbulbs don’t matter. Add softly waved blonde hair, glossed lips, and a casual stack of rings, and it’s done.
This red carpet fashion moment works because she picked a statement piece with history, then let the proportions carry everything else. No glitter. No branding overload. And somehow, still loud.
Final judgment? She didn’t borrow the ’90s—she took the wheel.