Emma Corrin Knows This One Accessory Will Never Go Out of Style
Amidst their power-clashing accessories, Emma Corrin found one piece that will always be in fashion.

Reported by Vogue.
Emma Corrin's Greatest Accessory Isn't What You'd Expect
On red carpets, Emma Corrin is basically a walking provocation. Pantless Miu Miu tuxedos. Loewe balloon dresses that play tricks on the eye. They've built a reputation as someone willing to push fashion into uncomfortable—thrilling—territory. But strip away the flashbulbs and the carefully curated chaos, and a different story emerges.
Corrin's off-duty aesthetic is deliberately understated, which somehow makes it more interesting. Recently spotted in London's Mayfair, they wore a worn black-and-silver striped tank tucked into light-wash straight-leg jeans—the kind of outfit that could disappear into a crowd. Except it didn't, because Corrin refuses to do boring, even when they're trying. That zebra-printed belt? A power move. The oversized brown Balenciaga bag clashing intentionally with black lace-up shoes. Gold-rimmed sunglasses with sepia lenses. White-gold Clash de Cartier rings stacked deliberately. Everything calculated to feel accidental.
The Accessory That Actually Matters
But here's what stopped the scroll: Corrin was carrying The Silver Book, Olivia Laing's historical novel. Not as a prop. As an actual companion for the day.
This isn't random. Corrin once ran @someb00kswotiread, an Instagram account entirely devoted to book recommendations—real literature, thoughtfully considered, shared with genuine enthusiasm. For someone constantly dressed in conceptual fashion statements, their actual statement is quieter and more lasting: a good book transcends trend cycles. It doesn't date. It doesn't need to be restyled next season.
There's something subversive about an actor known for sartorial risk-taking choosing to quietly champion the one accessory that will genuinely never go out of style. Not a designer handbag. Not limited-edition sneakers. A novel. In an age where we're conditioned to believe every aesthetic choice is temporary, Corrin's casual book-carrying reads like a small act of resistance—a reminder that some things still matter more than the visual frame around them. The outfit fades. The words stay.
Read the original at Vogue.

