Bella Hadid’s Latest Cannes Photo Dump Is a Mishmash of BTS Moments
POV: You

Reported by Harper's Bazaar.
Cannes may be over, but Bella Hadid is clearly not ready to let it go. The supermodel dropped an Instagram photo dump this week pulling back the curtain on her "favorite week" of the year — and it's exactly the kind of chaotic, sun-drenched archive dump you want to get lost in.
The looks, naturally, were the main event. According to Harper's Bazaar, Hadid revisited her red carpet moments in the carousel: a golden Elie Saab Fall 2004 gown, a custom Schiaparelli piece drawn from Jane Birkin's iconography, and Chopard jewels that caught the French Riviera light like they were made for it. But the off-duty edits hit just as hard — an ice-blue Louis Vuitton Spring 2003 minidress by Marc Jacobs, a vintage sheer top dripping in ruffles and sequins, and — perhaps the most unexpectedly charming detail — a light-blue Sabrina Carpenter "Busy Woman" baby tee tucked in among the haute couture. The range is the point.
The Sibling Moment We Didn't Know We Needed
Beyond the fashion, the dump doubled as a family album. Brother Anwar Hadid made the cut, and Bella had already given him his own dedicated post days earlier. The two attended the Garance premiere together in matching Prada — a detail Bella made sure to underscore in her caption, thanking the house alongside Chopard and the festival itself for "the most epic sibling movie night ever." Her words about Anwar — calm, cool, collected, making her feel loved and safe — were genuinely sweet in a way that felt unscripted.
As for the photo dump itself, Hadid's caption signaled more is coming: "Guess I'm just going to keep randomly choosing photos from our shared folder and hope you guys enjoy because this is hard." It reads like someone who genuinely cannot choose, which, honestly, is a very human problem to have when your week looked like that. The Orebella founder has always treated Cannes less like a press obligation and more like a personal ritual — and this year's documentation makes that case more convincingly than ever.
When your archive looks this good, dragging out the recap is basically a public service.
Read the original at Harper's Bazaar.


