Chances are you’ll assume that asking a employees stuffed with style editors to put on matching T-shirts would spark a (peaceable!) office-wide protest at Vogue; We care so deeply about private model that we have devoted our careers to expounding it. However when information of the Style for Our Future March was shared at an all-hands assembly—together with the costume code of Zac Posen-designed Previous Navy tees—we did not faux to overlook the memo and plan seems with out the shirt. As a substitute, we considered all of the methods we might model it with the items in our wardrobe. The numerous associates who joined us this morning—as we took to the streets of Manhattan alongside the CFDA and style neighborhood to encourage everybody to vote this November—did too.
“I did a high-waisted jean with my shirt tucked in—a type of Western-y, enjoyable, laid again second,” designer Brandon Blackwood advised us from Harold Sq., his shoe of selection a glossy pair of square-toe boots. “And clearly, all the time a durag; Very Brooklyn, very Mattress-Stuy.” Certainly one of a number of collaborating American designers, Blackwood was joined by Jennifer De La Cruz, who does PR for Blackwood’s eponymous label. “I tied my shirt within the again to make it a bit extra like a crop high, and styled it with a schoolgirl skirt and a few tights for a twist,” she stated.
This morning, as we marched alongside business titans together with Steven Kolb, Prabal Gurung and Tory Burch—and later heard remarks from First Girl Dr. Jill Biden, Thom Browne and Aurora James—we noticed mannequin Amelia Grey in classic Gucci shorts, designer Charles Harbison sporting a Dickies shirt, and British Vogue editor Julia Hobbs in boxy denims, ballet pumps and a Vogue baseball cap. Scroll by for extra objectively implausible styling. (And please, please—vote.)