Katie Holmes Is Sticking With Sandals for the End of Spring
And she’s found the perfect partner in wide-leg trousers

Reported by Harper's Bazaar.
Katie Holmes has always dressed like someone who figured herself out a long time ago and never felt the need to explain it. Her formula — relaxed separates, quality basics, the occasional color hit — rarely strays, and that consistency is exactly what makes her street style so watchable. Lately, one thing has become clear: she's all in on open-toe sandals, and she's making the case for wearing them well past their typical season.
According to Harper's Bazaar, Holmes logged two distinctly polished looks in a single day. For daytime, she wore brown thong sandals from Malone Souliers — hand-dyed gradient embossed leather with a stiletto heel that adds an inch and a half without sacrificing the relaxed energy of the silhouette. She paired them with a half-tucked striped blue dress shirt, dark-wash flared denim cut with a triangular side panel, and a Cuyana System Tote in brown that matched the shoes with the kind of precision that looks effortless but isn't.
From Daytime Denim to Film Festival Silk
That evening, Holmes arrived at the Perelman Performing Arts Center for a Tribeca Film Festival reception and recalibrated the palette entirely — tans, creams, latte tones. The thong sandals gave way to strappy open-toe heels in a double-strap silhouette, barely visible beneath high-waisted wide-leg trousers. A silk blazer, matching V-neck, a brown belt, and a black Adam Lippes Latch Clutch rounded out the look, styled by Brie Welch. It was the kind of outfit that reads as effortlessly dressed-up — the grown woman's answer to "I tried, but not that hard."
Holmes was at the festival for the premiere of Happy Couple, a second-chance rom-com that reunites her with former Dawson's Creek co-star Joshua Jackson. The film's buzz has been building, and Holmes has been dressing the part of someone confident in both her work and her wardrobe — which, at this point, feel like extensions of the same thing.
The sandal as a transitional shoe doesn't always get its due, but Holmes proves that the right pair — elevated heel, quality leather, intentional color — can carry an outfit from a casual afternoon to a film festival evening without missing a beat.
Read the original at Harper's Bazaar.


