Sunisa Lee wore a navy blazer and pleated skirt with knee socks at the Thom Browne Fall 2026 Collection show in San Francisco.
Let’s be honest — there’s a thin line between uniform-inspired and costume-y, and Sunisa Lee walked it with near-surgical precision at the Thom Browne Fall 2026 Collection during the GQ Bowl in San Francisco .
She showed up in full-on prep revival: a navy blazer , crisp white button-down , and red-navy striped tie , styled just tight enough to feel intentional. The matching pleated mini skirt hit mid-thigh — serious private school vibes — but it never felt like a parody. Why? Because every piece had structure. The fit was exact , no baggy mess, no faux-quirky mismatch.
And then came the Thom Browne signatures: the gray knee socks , pulled high with that red-white-navy trim right at the top. Plus those shiny black lace-ups — with razor-sharp pointed toes that looked almost cartoonish and serious at the same time. It’s weirdly effective. Like, purposeful weird. Browne’s whole vibe is always a bit twisted, but she wore it like it made sense.
The accessory moment was low-key perfect: a black dog-shaped handbag tucked neatly under her arm. That could’ve gone gimmick real fast — but with everything else so buttoned-up, it just read playful.
If you ask me, it works because she treated the whole look seriously. No wink, no irony. It’s weird prep done with a steady hand.
Amanda Seyfried wore a black blazer with relaxed jeans and pointed shoes while outside Capital Radio in London on February 5, 2026.
Some outfits work because they’re simple. Others work because they’re real. This is both. Amanda Seyfried was seen outside Capital Radio in London on February 5, 2026, wearing something that reads quiet, intentional, and low-drama.
She paired a neatly tailored black blazer — no bold shoulders, no exaggerated length, just clean and crisp — with straight-leg two-tone jeans . Think mid-wash denim down the middle and a darker indigo paneling along the outer seam. It adds just enough dimension to break up the blue.
The shoes are classic: black pointed-toe pumps that peek out just enough beneath the cuff. Not clunky boots, not sneakers trying to be cool. Grown-up, but not stiff. And tucked crossbody is a soft black leather bag , slouchy in a way that balances the shape of the jacket.
Here’s why it works: everything is understated, but tailored. No oversized compromises. The jeans are roomy without looking baggy. The blazer sits right at the hip — tailored, not tight. And that’s the key. It doesn’t look like effort, but nothing is lazy either.
Honestly, it’s refreshing. No giant logos, no overly plotted accessories. Just composed, polished celebrity street style with a touch of London sidewalk realism.
Becky G wore an oversized black turtleneck and snake-print knee boots at the Apple Music Super Bowl Celebration in February 2026.
I’ll say it straight — if you’re going to do oversized , commit. And that’s exactly what Becky G did at the Apple Music Super Bowl Halftime Show Celebration in San Francisco . No drama, no sequin overload, no faux-glam. Just a comfortably sharp look that actually earns its attitude.
She wore a black oversized turtleneck sweatshirt with light graphics on the sleeves — likely event-branded or personal merch. It hangs low, stops mid-thigh, wide in the shoulders, perfectly slouchy. It’s not trying to be “elevated loungewear.” It’s just cool in that throw-it-on-and-show-up way. Think “I didn’t overthink it” energy — except, obviously, it was planned.
The twist? Thigh-high snakeskin boots . Beige base, brown-black pattern, pointed toe, skinny heel. Drama without glitter. And honestly, they pull the whole thing into deliberate territory. The boots aren’t soft. They’re bold the way reptile prints always are — aggressive but stylish. And pairing them with something this relaxed? I get it. It’s contrast dressing without being obnoxious.
Dark wavy hair, soft glam makeup, and a shoulder bag that’s neither dainty nor oversized — it’s just… there. That’s what ties it together for me. There’s no focal-point accessory trying to be the main character. Just pieces, worn with control.
If you’re going to a media event where the cameras are working overtime, this is one way to avoid looking like you’re trying too hard — but still get noticed.