Stars lean into Met Gala’s 2025 theme: ‘Superfine: Tailoring Black Style’
Hello! Ellie and Morwenna from the Guardian’s fashion desk here in London. We’ll be watching the Met Gala – fashion’s Oscars/Baftas/Olympics – so you don’t have to, guiding you through the probable hits and possible misses from a starry guest list which includes Zendaya, Ariana Grande, Rihanna, and multiple Jenner/Kardashians.
To recap on what you’re watching: as ever, the Met Gala takes place on the first Monday in May as the opening of New York’s Costume Institute exhibition. There is always a theme, and usually some sort of accompanying text, and this year’s it’s called “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style,” which will look back at 300 years of Black fashion alongside the history of Black dandyism.
To get you up to speed, do have a read of this brilliant piece by the Guardian’s Sasha Mistlin from earlier this week. Last month, Sasha interviewed Monica L. Miller, whose 2009 book, Slaves to Fashion: Black Dandyism and the Styling of Black Diasporic Identity, interrogates of the strategic use of fashion by Black men throughout history, which is the inspiration behind both the exhibition and gala.
The theme is notable for various reasons, not least because it’s the Met’s first ever fashion exhibition devoted entirely to designers of colour so is being viewed by some as a wider effort to incorporate more diversity into the collection. It’s timely too. Previous galas have been criticised for being tone-deaf, little more than peacocking, and a parade of privilege and elitism.
In her preview piece for the Saturday paper, Jess Cartner-Morley describes this year’s theme as an “intellectually minded celebration of diversity [which] lands at a moment when the Trump administration is pushing back robustly against both diversity and intellectualism”.
However you view it, the event itself has huge cultural and celebrity cachet, helped no end by Anna Wintour and her assembled co-hosts: Colman Domingo, Lewis Hamilton, ASAP Rocky and Pharrell Williams with LeBron James as the honorary chair.
This is handy given the main thrust of the gala is making money. A choice guest list of designers, celebrities and other notables will have bought tickets or a table at great cost. An individual ticket is $75,000, or over £55,ooo, while a table of ten goes for more than a quarter of a million pounds. Donations also roll in from donors. Proceeds then go to the Costume Institute, which is dependent on the gala for its main operating costs, though it’s worth mention that the gala itself costs a lot of put on too … The gala’s arrival is fleeting: stars arrive, walk up the stairs, and disappear inside. There is a party with dinner and music, more on what that involves later. And there is almost always Rihanna.
Fashion-wise, what does that mean? We can probably expect some radical tailoring, a little menswear-as-womenswear, flamboyant spins on the modern dandy and a diverse raft of designers. But what we want to see is a celebration of fashion at its most multicultural, expressive and absurd. Fashion as high art.
We all know that the red carpet is now an economy unto itself, a strangely cultivated branding exercise for celebrities and marketing tool by the fashion industry built on an illusion that the gowns and dandy suits are an expression of a celebrity’s personal style when in fact, they’ve been picked by a stylist. But that doesn’t stop it being wonderful to watch.
Key events

Morwenna Ferrier
While we wait to see if Rihanna makes it to the red (blue) carpet for the Great Pregnancy Reveal we’re all owed, what did you think of this year’s Met Gala?
No clangers, but no fireworks?
Some excellent tailoring and colossal trains, and a lot of Thom Browne, eBay and Josephine Baker kiss curls – but not a lot of historical references, vintage pieces or protest pins.
It was great to see lowkey British brands such as Priya Ahluwalia and Wales Bonner on such a global stage, but the event was somewhat lacking when it comes to new, young, Black designers. Still, everyone braved the rain. It was perhaps just a little sad that André Leon Talley didn’t live to see it.
Until next year, that’s a wrap. Thanks for reading!

Morwenna Ferrier
And so, Rihanna is pregnant again.
Hurrying into the Carlyle hotel in a cute powder blue three-piece, her tummy partially hidden by a stole, she flashed a bit of belly for the paps.
The last time the couple appeared at the Met Gala in 2023, Rihanna was pregnant with their second child, Riot. Back then, she wore a floral hooded gown by Valentino, and A$AP Rocky wore a suit jacket, jeans, and a kilt.
Given the reveal itself was saved for her Super Bowl 2023 Halftime Show, it’s fitting that the couple have chosen this year’s gala – in which A$AP Rocky is on the committee – for pregnancy reveal number three. As to whether she’ll actually make it to the gala, who knows. Rihanna is running on Rihanna time – Anna Wintour once admitted that the only person she’ll allow to be late is the singer.

Ellie Violet Bramley
The US model yesterday posted an Instagram of herself wearing a brown leather jacket with the face of André Leon Talley across the back. She captioned it “famine of beauty”, quoting something the former Vogue US creative said in the September Issue. “It’s been a very bleak week over here. It’s been bleak street over here in America… It’s a famine of beauty!”
Tonight, in this look by Ferragamo’s creative director, Maximilian Davis, Paloma Elsesser is arguably bringing some beauty to another bleak week. Ahead of the night, she wrote in Vogue of Davis and dandyism: “He is restraint as resistance. He is the embodiment of Black dandyism, not as aesthetic but as inheritance, as strategy, as declaration. Black dandyism is not about assimilation. It is about subversion. It takes the tropes of thinness, whiteness, and wealth, and rejects them. It is precision. It is defiance wrapped in silk.”
She also wrote: “I just thought constantly about what André Leon Talley would think of my look. I hope he approves too.”

Morwenna Ferrier
If the alternative theme of the night was ‘go big or go straight inside without posing for the cameras’, the singer Andre 3000 went for a more speaking-in-clothes theme. Shortly before he took to the carpet, released a surprise piano project: ‘7 piano pieces’
Wearing a zip-up parachute suit, red beret, and carrying what looked like a refuse sack, the singer hauled his piano up the staircase. Notes on a postcard.

Ellie Violet Bramley
FKA Twigs has floated along the red carpet wearing a feathery Grace Wales Bonner look that seems to have been inspired by Josephine Baker, the world’s first female superstar of colour who became a prominent and outspoken US civil rights campaigner.
Speaking to Vogue ahead of tonight, Twigs likened the Met Gala to The Secret Life of 4-Year-Olds: “Imagine: loads of really famous people – who I promise are just normal humans – wandering around without their teams for once. It’s like that TV show where nursery kids are filmed with hidden cameras, trying to socialise – except you’re between Donatella Versace and Lady Gaga.” We can’t wait to find out what happens in the sandpit later.

Ellie Violet Bramley
Nothing says Met Gala steps like a gargantuan train, and Stevie Wonder clearly knows it.
Speaking on the red carpet, Wonder is wise: “Love, not confusion, not hate, love,” is what he says is most needed today. “And that’s why I’m here.”

Morwenna Ferrier
It wouldn’t be a celebrity circus without a last minute carpet dash by Madonna, now would it?
Another off-white suit in the mould of Zendaya, the 66-year-old pop star is wearing an ivory silk version by Haider Ackermann, the new designer at Tom Ford, complete with cumberbund, Desperately Seeking Susan lace gloves, and like Doechii, has offset the whole look with a cigar (unlit – we’re inside). The memo all but forgotten, it is however tailored, with a touch of dandy, and regally inoffensive.

Ellie Violet Bramley
Colin Kaepernick and US TV host girlfriend Nessa Diab have gone in different directions with the same garment here. Diab is wearing her cape – so far, so Met Gala – made out of puffa material (less so, but then anything is possible on this infamous steps). The design is the work of former editor-in-chief of British Vogue Edward Enninful for Moncler.
Kaepernick, the NFL quarterback who first popularised taking the knee as an act of solidarity and political protest, was wearing a red silk jacquard suit and statement overcoat, which looks a lot like a cape to me – apparently, according to a release, “a luxurious nod to 1920s New York tailoring reimagined for modern resistance and refinement”. It is the work of Savile Row designer Ozwald Boateng.

Morwenna Ferrier
There have been a few overarching themes. Wide-brimmed hats, beading, capes and trains – see Diana Ross, Stevie Wonder and Shakira have all worn vast getups that have made a landgrab for the entire carpet.
But it’s the subtle and variety of pinstripes that have been a throughline tonight. Jeremy Allen White’s Louis Vuitton suit – “we landed on pinstripes pretty early – and the suit got snugger and snugger” – is zhushed up by pearl buttons and wide legs into something a bit zoot suit in shape. Meanwhile Alicia Keys in her deconstructed red pinstripe suit by Edward Enninful for Moncler – that’s right, the former Vogue editor has turned his hand to designing clothes – has sleeves that could double up as an arm rest.
The exhibition incorporates a host of pinstripe tailoring, reimagined to reflect both its heritage and creativity within Black tailoring.

Ellie Violet Bramley
Wearing custom Valentino, US athlete Sha’Carri Richardson couldn’t be more on trend if she tried in that buttery shade of yellow. The toast? A lilac lace bodysuit.
Her statement nails, long a part of her on-track look, took centre stage on the red carpet, too. Nail artist Angie Aguirre described the stiletto-shaped style, entailing different adornments for each nail, as “a garden on a finger”.
Asked how she interpreted the theme, Tailored for You, she told Vogue: “All I felt was ‘expressing yourself’, being my unique self, showing exactly who I am through fashion, just like I do on the track … I’m just going to show up and flow, like I usually do.”

Morwenna Ferrier
Monica L Miller, whose book Slaves to Fashion: Black Dandyism and the Styling of Black Diasporic Identity is the inspiration behind the exhibition and the gala itself, described the event as her “biggest class to date”.
For the event itself, she straddled several themes, working with menswear designer Grace Wales Bonner on her caped beaded gown with a silver trim. This is the first time Wales Bonner has been part of the Met, and as well as being on the committee, eight of her looks are in the exhibition, with the earliest – a crushed velvet jacket embroidered with shells, crystals and pearls – dating to 2015, the year after she graduated from Central St Martins.
Along with a number of guests, Bonner (who wore one of her own suits, but slipped past the cameras) cited André Leon Talley, who was famous for his “amazing wardrobe and flamboyant style”, as an outsized influence.