Look of the Week: Hunter Schafer's ethereal Oscars after-party look
three words that best describe Hunter Schafer's Vanity Fair Oscars party look? Less is more.
Dressed in a bias-cut white silk skirt, a single ivory-colored feather and — crucially — nothing else, Schafer was bound to raise a few eyebrows. Google searches for the actor and model skyrocketed on Sunday night as her look hit social media. On Twitter, pictures of Schafer immediately received tens of thousands of likes, while her own Instagram post has now been liked more than 2 million times.
But more than just creating a headline-grabbing moment, Schafer's ensemble was clearly considered. Fresh off the Fall-Winter 2023 runway, the look debuted earlier this month at fashion house Ann Demeulemeester's show in Paris. It was designed by Ludovic de Saint Sernin, the label's creative director since December.
Celebrity fashion works best when there's a story behind a look. For example, thehttp:// plausible Edie Sedgwick reference in Kendall Jenner's Bottega Veneta tights, or Paul Mescal winking at traditional masculinity in a plain white tank top.
For his first Ann Demeulemeester collection, De Saint Sernin was inspired by "fashion-making as an authentic act of self-involvement." It was a love letter — almost literally — to the Belgian label's founder, with imagery of "authorship and autobiography" baked into the clothes (Sernin called his feather bandeaus "quills" in the show notes)

Hunter Schafer's barely-there Oscars after party look was more poetic than it first seemed. Credit: Karwai Tang/WireImage/Getty Images
These ideas of self-expression, self-love and self-definition took on new meaning when worn by Schafer. As a trans woman whose ascent to fame was inextricably linked to her gender identity — her big break was playing trans teenager Jules in HBO's "Euphoria" — Schafer's body is subjected to constant scrutiny online. The comment sections on her Instagram posts often descend into open forums, where users feel entitled (and seemingly compelled) to ask intimate questions about the trans experience or challenge Schafer's womanhood.
Fittingly, there is a long lineage of gender-defying sentiments stitched into Schafer's outfit. Founded in 1985 by Ann Demeulemeester and her husband Patrick Robyn, the brand boasts a long legacy of gender-non-conforming fashion.
"I was interested in the tension between masculine and feminine, but also the tension between masculine and feminine within one person," Demeulemeester told Vogue ahead of a retrospective exhibition of her work in Florence, Italy, last year. "That is what makes every person really interesting to me because everybody is unique

No comments: