Jennifer Lopez Diversifies Her Corporate Wardrobe With Three Totally Different Blazers
She’s found a palette that works for her

Reported by Harper's Bazaar.
Jennifer Lopez showed up to the Netflix Upfront in New York this week with one clear agenda: prove that a neutral palette is anything but boring. Promoting her upcoming film Office Romance (due June 5), Lopez — styled by longtime collaborators Rob Zangardi and Mariel Haenn — cycled through three distinctly different looks across the span of a single day, all anchored in the same warm, earthy spectrum. The result was a masterclass in how range and restraint can coexist.
She arrived at the Upfront in a vintage Jean Paul Gaultier look pulled from the Spring/Summer 2004 archive — a corset-laced blazer with floral embroidery and elastic cutout panels, paired with a high-low midi skirt alternating between satin and lace. Strappy champagne heels and pearl climber earrings kept the whole thing from tipping into costume territory. It was maximalist, yes, but with the kind of intention that separates a fashion moment from a fashion mistake.
The Rest of the Day Held Up
Departing to the Four Seasons, Lopez switched into a taupe oversize double-breasted suit from Dolce & Gabbana's Spring/Summer 2026 ready-to-wear collection, worn open over a black Intimissimi triangle bra and paired with platform sandals that matched the suit in near-perfect gradient. Plaid boxer shorts visible above her waistband mirrored the runway styling directly. A cheetah-print top-handle bag, gold chains from Isabel Delgado and Marie Lichtenberg, and oversize Chloé sunglasses rounded it out — lingerie dressing done with the confidence of someone who absolutely does not need your approval.
By evening, Lopez leaned into deeper tones for a Office Romance screening in Jersey City: a Magda Butrym fur-effect coat in light brown — belted, hourglass-cut — layered over a chocolate midi dress. A burgundy croc-leather Tom Ford clutch, Prada Symbole sunglasses, and satin heels tied the look together with the kind of precision that feels effortless only because someone worked very hard to make it so. According to Harper's Bazaar, the three-look streak illustrated Lopez's full range while holding tightly to a signature warm, neutral throughline.
Neutrals don't have to mean safe — when the silhouettes are doing this much work, the palette is simply the punctuation.
Read the original at Harper's Bazaar.


