Zoë Kravitz and Harry Styles Share a Passion for Business Casual
While it seems that Zoë Kravitz and Harry Styles are merging their closets, Kravitz is differentiating her style with pieces that are distinct to her.

Reported by Vogue.
There's a particular kind of intimacy that shows up in shared style — not matching outfits, but a gravitational pull toward the same aesthetic language. Zoë Kravitz, recently spotted solo in London, wore a look so fluent in Harry Styles's visual dialect that it felt like a love letter dressed as a wardrobe choice: white button-up open over a white tank, black trousers, black loafers. Clean. Considered. Unmistakably them.
According to Vogue, since Styles launched his Together, Together tour in Amsterdam last month, his stage wardrobe has leaned hard into business-casual architecture — button-downs, ties, slacks — then blown the whole thing open with saturated color, bold pattern, and maximalist accessories. The framework is boardroom; the execution is spectacle. Kravitz's off-duty rotation operates on the same frequency: structured tops, fluid trousers, the kind of effortlessness that actually requires a very specific point of view.
Same Blueprint, Different Signature
What keeps Kravitz from disappearing into couple-style territory is her instinct for the differentiating detail. Where Styles escalates with volume and theatrics, she goes personal and specific. The London look was punctuated with a striped beanie from Edward Cuming — a nod to her well-documented affection for the bucket hat and its knitwear cousins. It's a small move that does a lot of work: same foundational wardrobe logic, entirely her own finish.
Shared style between partners tends to read as either deeply romantic or quietly suffocating, depending on who's doing the absorbing. Kravitz sidesteps that entirely. The overlap with Styles feels less like influence and more like convergence — two people who were already moving toward the same place, now occasionally arriving in parallel. The button-up is a coincidence. The way she wears it is a statement.
When your personal style is strong enough, dressing like your partner doesn't dilute you — it just gives you more to work with.
Read the original at Vogue.


