How to Master ’90s Slip Dressing, Per Your Favorite Celebs
From skirts to dresses, here’s how Gigi, Zendaya, and Zoë achieve the look.

Reported by Vogue.
Slip dressing is having its most convincing moment yet. According to Vogue, the lingerie-inspired trend has cemented itself as one of spring/summer 2026's defining aesthetics — a natural consequence of fashion's sustained '90s obsession and the minimalist current running through street style right now. Slinky bias-cut dresses, lace-trimmed skirts, silky camisoles: the category is broad, the entry point is low, and celebrities have been quietly making the case for all of it.
The Formula: Layer, Contrast, Done
The smartest celebrity interpretations don't treat slip pieces as standalone statements — they use them as the foundation. Gigi Hadid anchored a lace-trimmed cream slip skirt with an oversized gray sweater, olive satin ballet flats, and a Miu Miu bag: transitional dressing that actually makes sense for a city spring. Kendall Jenner took a similarly low-key approach — white slip skirt, chocolate brown tee, charcoal V-neck layered on top, black pointed pumps — achieving something that reads as quietly office-appropriate without trying. Zoë Kravitz pushed the formula further, choosing a full lace slip in ochre tones and adding textural friction through a knitted cardigan, PVC pumps, and a suede clutch. Refined and slightly undone, which is, frankly, the ideal.
For those who prefer their minimalism with an edge: Vittoria Ceretti attended a Rolling Stones album release in a slip dress and leather jacket, finished with high-vamp flats, square black sunglasses, and silver hardware. Katie Holmes collision-tested the trend against bold color, pairing an aqua blue Dôen slip skirt with a tomato red button-down, grounded by black glove flats and aviator sunglasses. Both women prove that slip dressing doesn't require precious handling — it's more resilient than it looks.
Evening and travel applications are equally strong. Dakota Johnson packed one pale blue slip dress for Rome, threw a black sweater over the shoulders, added a burgundy bag for contrast, and called it. Zoe Saldaña made a red silk slip dress wedding-guest-ready with a black tuxedo blazer, strappy heeled sandals, and just enough sparkle. Blackpink's Jennie closed out post-Met Gala parties in a matching lace-trimmed camisole and skirt set with knee-high leather boots and a Prada bag — Y2K with actual follow-through.
The trend's staying power comes down to one thing: slip pieces don't demand a complete wardrobe overhaul — they integrate into what you already own, then elevate it. One well-cut skirt or bias slip dress, and the rest is just editing.
Read the original at Vogue.


