Zendaya and Tom Holland’s Casual In-N-Out Trip Highlights Their Matching Curls
Two peas in a pod

Reported by Harper's Bazaar.
Zendaya and Tom Holland just proved that the effortless couple aesthetic isn't a myth—it's a curl pattern you both commit to. According to Harper's Bazaar, the pair was spotted grabbing In-N-Out on their way to the studio in Los Angeles, marking a rare public moment that felt less "red carpet" and more "we actually live together now." Their synchronized styling wasn't accidental: matching textured curls, coordinated palettes, and the kind of casual polish that screams "we have our shit together."
Zendaya kept it deceptively simple in black-and-white separates—a black boat-neck long sleeve paired with loose white linen trousers that read expensive-relaxed rather than sloppy. She threw on black leather-and-suede flip-flops from the Row (because even comfort pieces have a designer when you're her), grabbed a sweatshirt as backup, and let her new micro bob do the talking. The cut—debuted during her recent press tour—curled deliberately at the jawline, framing her face without trying too hard. On her hands sat the real headline: her Jessica McCormack engagement ring and wedding band, glinting with the kind of understated luxury that makes you forget it probably costs more than a car.
The Coordinated Approach
Holland matched his wife's energy in green-and-white layers and dark trousers, anchoring the look with black-and-white sneakers. His maroon baseball cap—branded with his non-alcoholic beer venture, BERO—kept the vibe grounded and actually wearable. The real flex was the black Louis Vuitton sling bag slung across his body: a soft calfskin piece with an adjustable strap and gold hardware that may or may not belong to Zendaya first, given her brand ambassador status with the house. The bag's spacious design made it practical, which somehow made the whole thing even more enviable.
What struck hardest was how intentional the casualness felt. Both embraced their natural curls rather than straightening them into submission. Both chose comfort without sacrificing polish. Both understood that matching doesn't mean twinning—it means existing on the same wavelength, which, let's be honest, is the real flex in a relationship.
Sometimes the most stylish thing a couple can do is show up looking like they actually know each other.
Read the original at Harper's Bazaar.


