Quiet Luxury to the Left: Every Chic Person Is Wearing This Summer Aesthetic Instead

Quiet Luxury to the Left: Every Chic Person Is Wearing This Summer Aesthetic Instead


Without fail, you’ll find that summertime sweeps us all up into a sort of collective fervor. It’s not so much that the heat has us stirring with excitement (although, that’s a small part of it) as much as the season itself always manages to be filled with new trends, music, and films that end up collectively ushering in a fresh summer aesthetic. Although some might argue that the cultural phenomenon of having a singular trending aesthetic or sound in the summer no longer exists, we’ve seen the fashion world turn this notion on its head in recent years. In a time when algorithms are slowly pushing us into our own corners of the internet, fashion designers have continued to foster a sense of collective culture by tapping into pockets of pop culture through their clothing—e.g., sportswear has remained a trend on the runway. Its prodigal return coincided with the box-office popularity of the film Challengers and rise in Formula One fandom.

Beyond drawing inspiration from the court, we’ve seen recent runway shows also pull from other unexpected sources, thereby kick-starting more “controversial” summer aesthetics that have ended up creating collective outrage or acclaim. Case in point: Indie sleaze’s contentious return inspired by the Billboard-charting album Brat by Charli XCX, or the collective obsession with the quiet luxury aesthetic, which was driven primarily by deeper psychological fears around a looming recession (plus the success of the television series Succession). Love them or hate them, these summer aesthetics have acted as a counterbalance to cultural critics’ concerns that there’s no singular monoculture that we can reference as a connective touchpoint. We can thank runway collections for that, as they’ve remained one of the easiest ways to get a read on what cultural conversations are dominating the forefront of fashion and beyond.