This bold outfit features two of Tokyo’s big trends—oversize bottoms with wide-leg striped pants and pops of primary colors, Dan Ige 8 Weeks 6 Weeks 4 Weeks 4 Hours Doesn’t Matter Shirt and yellow graphic T-shirts balanced out by a bold red lip and matching heels. When the outfit takes a more subdued approach to color, interest is created by playing with proportions and incorporating unexpected textures. This oversize and intentionally ill-fitted suede coat does both of those things, and it finds footing with statement black leather shoes. It would be an understatement to reduce this floor-length canary yellow duster to a “pop of primary color.” Paired with the unexpected textures of a fur under layer, a bamboo handbag, and bold statement jewelry, the only subtle part of the outfit is the black leather boots. This denim jumpsuit look requires few additional accessories to make a statement. If you look closely, you’ll see that it’s actually a pair of wide-leg overalls topped off with a matching jean jacket. Black leather platform brogues give the denim-on-denim look an added cool factor, and the army-green bomber jacket brings it all together in colder weather. A true jumpsuit, the head-to-toe khaki look is livened up by a pop of primary color via the patterned silk scarf worn as a neckerchief. The jumpsuit’s large fit is made chic with a black belt tied tightly at the waist and oversize bottoms tucked into black satin ankle boots. A tweed jacket and Mary Janes worn with socks make this ensemble wonderfully retro, but the bright pop of yellow and round sunglasses keep the look forward-thinking and cool.
Dan Ige 8 Weeks 6 Weeks 4 Weeks 4 Hours Doesn’t Matter Shirt, hoodie, sweater, longsleeve and ladies t-shirt





“I have nepo-baby energy,” admits a candid Suki Waterhouse on a recent episode of EmRata’s High Low podcast where she was a guest. Dan Ige 8 Weeks 6 Weeks 4 Weeks 4 Hours Doesn’t Matter Shirt The comment was remarkably self-aware. The model-turned-singer-songwriter-actor is a combination of multi-hyphenates that’s better described, as we do these days, simply as a “cool girl.” And cool-girl energy is what Waterhouse has in spades. Flying relatively under the radar in recent years, Waterhouse is one who possesses the effortless glam that so much of Hollywood is after, yet she seems to have it naturally. Maybe you know Waterhouse for her music (she released her debut album, I Can’t Let Go, last spring, and TikTok has made her song “Good Looking” go viral); the fact that she’s dating the internet’s favorite moody heartthrob, Robert Pattinson; or the fact that she’s starring in this spring’s most highly anticipated TV series, Hulu’s Daisy Jones and the Six. The fluidity with which Waterhouse has been able to move from creative career to creative career seems like the kind of path that’s only available to those who’s parents or family members provided a plethora of industry connections. And yet Waterhouse, a West London native was scouted at age 16 and worked her way into the spotlight via her modeling work and the connections she made along the way. Regardless of how you came to know Waterhouse, though, there’s no denying she’s in her moment. She’s always had that cool-girl vibe with model-off-duty style and a perfectly messy coif of French-girl fringe to go with. But with the arrival of Daisy Jones has come a flood of new red carpet and street style ensembles from the star, with each look being even more major than the last. It has us certain that Waterhouse is the next style icon of our generation—and with so much of Hollywood paring things back with their tailored minimalism, the arrival of Waterhouse and her ’70s-era fringe and a plethora of glamorous sequined, sheer, and high-octane ensembles, it’s a total breath of fresh air.
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