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    Home»Fashion»These Are the 7 Most Important 2025 Fashion Trends
    Fashion

    These Are the 7 Most Important 2025 Fashion Trends

    By AdminDecember 17, 2024
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    These Are the 7 Most Important 2025 Fashion Trends


    Exactly 377 days ago, I wrote the 2024 version of this exact story and started by discussing the ever-changing fashion environment throughout the year prior. Back then, I was excited about the possibilities surrounding some of the industry’s more recent creative-director hires—including designers Matthieu Blazy at Bottega Veneta (Blazy started in 2020) and Louise Trotter at Carven. (Trotter started in 2023.) Changes were happening at major houses, new legacies were being built, and excitement was in the air. Little did I know then that 2024 would bring about even more variation. Just last week, Trotter announced her departure from Carven, followed by Blazy at Bottega Veneta. The Italian leather goods brand then named Trotter as Blazy’s successor. A few hours later, Chanel answered every fashion person’s most burning question: Who will take over from Virginie Viard? The answer was Blazy. That’s only two of the industry’s many swapped seats this year.

    Suffice it to say, 2025 is on track to blow 2024’s chaotic and unpredictable energy out of the water, but that doesn’t mean we must go into the year completely blind. After studying the spring/summer 2025 runway collections and end-of-year culture shifts, I feel confident about my predictions about what’s to come in the next 365 days or so. Below, read up on 2025 fashion before the year even begins, from 180-degree aesthetic changes to fresh color trends.

    A collage with

    (Image credit: TheStewartofNY/GC Images/Getty Images; @hoskelsa; Launchmetrics Spotlight; @fannyekstrand; MEGA/GC Images/Getty Images)

    Though this trend has been slowly creeping up for a few seasons now, Saint Laurent’s S/S 25 collection really put it on the map. We’re calling it a few different things, including soft power and power play, but generally speaking, it’s fashion’s move toward a softer version of workwear that isn’t as sharp and tailored as it’s been in the past. Suits are slightly more relaxed and oversize and styled personally with cuff bracelets, oversize sunglasses, and interesting outerwear. The trend extended to Bottega Veneta, Stella McCartney, and Christopher Esber. In a press release following Louis Vuitton’s show during Paris Fashion Week, the house’s creative director Nicolas Ghesquière called soft power the ultimate oxymoron given that softness and power are often seen as opposites. However, where they meet is really where successful women reside. They’re multifaceted beings who are able to balance the two contrasting concepts naturally.

    Going into 2025, expect this new corporate aesthetic to hit the streets more and more. We’ve already seen Saint Laurent’s versions on Hailey Bieber and Rosé, but there will, no doubt, be unique takes hitting our social media feeds everywhere very soon. To help you out, here’s a tutorial on how to tie a tie. You’ll need it.

    ZARA

    Striped Silk-Viscose Tie

    Miu Miu

    Regard Sunglasses

    (Image credit: John Nacion/Getty Images; Taylor Hill/WireImage; Gilbert Carrasquillo/GC Images/Getty Images; Courtesy of Prada; Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty Images; Gilbert Carrasquillo/GC Images/Getty Images; Barry Gossage/NBAE via Getty Images)

    I recently attended the Shark Beauty Women’s Champions Classic, a two-game NCAA basketball event at Barclays Center, and the turnout for the second game of the night between the University of Connecticut (UConn) Huskies and the University of Louisville Cardinals was unlike anything I’ve ever seen. The place was packed, especially with women and girls, many of whom wore one specific T-shirt (unless they were wearing merch for UConn star player and Nike athlete Paige Bueckers) by the brand Togethxr. The tee is simple with four words printed on the front in all caps: Everyone watches women’s sports.

    That T-shirt says it all. According to a report published this month by Morning Consult, an American intelligence company, the WNBA was 2024’s fastest-growing brand among all U.S. adults. It was the first time since the company was founded in 2014 that a sports league ranked first on this list. According to StubHub, ticket sales were up nearly 10 times in 2024 compared to 2023 before the season even began. “This year’s NCAA Women’s Final Four and the WNBA Finals were the best-selling in StubHub history,” the company published in a recent report. But it’s not just women’s basketball that’s on an upward trajectory.

    Following the Paris Olympics, which saw 28 out of 32 sports be fully gender equal, female medalists like Suni Lee, Tara Davis-Woodhall, and Ilona Maher were ubiquitous, particularly at fashion events. At the tail end of 2024, female athletes were spotted front row at New York Fashion Week; on the red carpet at the CFDA Awards, GQ Men of the Year event, and Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show; and courtside at sporting events decked out in stylish designer garb. Clearly, fashion has noticed the impact women are having on sports and those who view them, and brands, from Prada to Tory Burch, are getting involved in the action.