Vroom Vroom! How to Do F1 Style Like an A-Lister
Vroom, vroom!

Reported by Vogue.
Formula 1 has become fashion's most glamorous spectator sport. The paddock is no longer just about who crosses the finish line—it's about what the celebrities in the stands are wearing. Kendall Jenner, Anya Taylor-Joy, and Timothée Chalamet have all turned race weekends into red-carpet moments, proving that motorsport style demands the same level of investment as any awards show appearance. According to Vogue, the circuit has evolved into a front-row seat where fashion and athletics collide in real time.
Miami's F1 race presents a particular styling challenge: you need to honor the speedway's high-octane energy while acknowledging the city's tropical swagger. The solution? Blend motorsport codes—moto jackets with exaggerated collars, racing stripes, punchy color—with Miami's built-in ease. Think mini skirts that breathe in the heat, strategic swimwear flashes, and heeled sandals that work the tarmac without melting. Your outfit should feel equally comfortable in the paddock or poolside.
The Outfit Formula
Cropped leather jackets in denim or patent finishes (think Courrèges) nail that trackside attitude, especially when paired with minimal minis. An all-white moment reads as both Miami-ready and racing-clean, with graphic red accents subtly nodding to the sport's visual language. Designers like Jacquemus excel at tropical dressing—a lemon-yellow mini dress works beautifully with racing stripes courtesy of Miu Miu's archive. Tory Burch's track pants bridge paddock and beach culture, while a bold Emilio Pucci print makes the kind of statement that only Miami can justify.
The through-line here isn't complicated: lean into structural pieces with attitude (moto jackets, striped polos), keep the color story either minimal and monochromatic or unapologetically loud, and prioritize fabrics that won't betray sweat at trackside. Your goal is to look like you belong in the VIP suite, not like you're trying too hard to prove it. The best F1 outfits feel inevitable rather than assembled—a refinement of who you already are, just with higher stakes and better lighting.
Treat the paddock like the runway it's become, and dress accordingly.
Read the original at Vogue.

