Recreate ’90s Minimalist Looks Inspired by Kendall, Hailey & More
Celebrities are embracing minimalist-coded fashion—and you can too.

Reported by Vogue.
The '90s never really left — they just waited for us to catch up. According to Vogue, celebrities from Kendall Jenner to Bella Hadid have been steadily pulling from the decade's minimalist playbook, building off-duty wardrobes that feel less like trend-chasing and more like a genuine aesthetic reckoning. The momentum picked up long before any streaming series could claim credit; this is a slow-burn revival with real staying power.
The foundational pieces are exactly what you'd expect — and that's the point. Poplin cargo pants, revived by cult labels like Leset and Deiji Studios, have been spotted on Jennifer Lawrence styled with an oversized navy crewneck and puka shell necklace, channeling the same ease Jennifer Aniston brought to the silhouette three decades ago. Meanwhile, Hailey Bieber continues to anchor the clean girl aesthetic around the tank dress — a direct descendant of the LBDs that defined Naomi Campbell and Kate Moss's off-duty era — worn here with a croc-embossed clutch, skinny sunglasses, and the kind of restraint that reads as effortless precisely because nothing is overdone. Kendall Jenner, a committed minimalist by nature, recently dressed an open-knit top (pure Calvin Klein circa 1996) and indigo cigarette jeans with glove flats and a printed bandana — modern inflections on a silhouette that hasn't needed updating.
The Case for Going Further
Not every interpretation is stripped back. Bella Hadid has been pivoting from her urban cowgirl phase toward something leaner — a leather blazer, white baby tee, and bootcut jeans sourced directly from the decade, worn with leopard peep-toes and a Loewe Amazona bag. Zoë Kravitz delivered a different kind of masterclass: a trench coat over a cream top, chocolate trousers, and matched suede loafers — neutral layering so precise it reads like a mood board for Jil Sander's entire legacy. Chloe Sevigny, who practically invented the aesthetic the first time around, showed up in New York in an oversized tee with a lace-trimmed slip skirt and a Dario Vitale-era Versace SS26 bucket bag — grunge-adjacent but still clean in its proportions. Even Olivia Rodrigo's plaid Miu Miu moment — complete with strappy red patent Mary Janes — feels cohesive within this larger conversation, given that Miuccia Prada's obsession with the print has always carried a nostalgic charge.
What unites all of it is commitment to shape over noise. The supermodels, Gwyneth Paltrow, Winona Ryder — the women who built this aesthetic the first time — understood that restraint is its own form of intention. That's the lesson being absorbed right now, one cigarette jean and tank dress at a time.
When the uniform hasn't changed in thirty years, that's not nostalgia — that's just good taste.
Read the original at Vogue.


