Hunter Schafer’s Oscars after-party look
The three phrases that finest describe Hunter Schafer’s Vanity Fair Oscars get together look? Less is extra.
But extra than simply making a headline-grabbing second, Schafer’s ensemble was clearly thought-about. Fresh off the Fall-Winter 2023 runway, the look debuted earlier this month at vogue home Ann Demeulemeester’s present in Paris. It was designed by Ludovic de Saint Sernin, the label’s inventive director since December.
For his first Ann Demeulemeester assortment, De Saint Sernin was impressed by “fashion-making as an authentic act of self-involvement.” It was a love letter — virtually actually — to the Belgian label’s founder, with imagery of “authorship and autobiography” baked into the garments (Sernin known as his feather bandeaus “quills” within the present notes).
Hunter Schafer’s barely-there Oscars after get together look was extra poetic than it first appeared. Credit: Karwai Tang/WireImage/Getty Images
These concepts of self-expression, self-love and self-definition took on new that means when worn by Schafer. As a trans lady whose ascent to fame was inextricably linked to her gender id — her huge break was taking part in trans teenager Jules in HBO’s “Euphoria” — Schafer’s physique is subjected to fixed scrutiny on-line. The remark sections on her Instagram posts usually descend into open boards, the place customers really feel entitled (and seemingly compelled) to ask intimate questions concerning the trans expertise or problem Schafer’s womanhood.
Fittingly, there’s a lengthy lineage of gender-defying sentiments stitched into Schafer’s outfit. Founded in 1985 by Ann Demeulemeester and her husband Patrick Robyn, the model boasts a protracted legacy of gender-non-conforming vogue.

Schafer’s outfit debuted on the Paris runway earlier this month. Credit: Kristy Sparow/Getty Images
In his newest co-ed assortment, De Saint Sernin — who’s famend within the trade for his eponymous, gender-fluid label — introduced his androgynous world view to Ann Demeulemeester with fitted, romantic menswear silhouettes and sensual materials for all (suppose skin-tight mesh tops, leather-based, and open shirts made out of a translucent organza materials).
A quill strapped throughout her chest, Schafer tell us she continues to be writing her narrative — and defining herself on her personal phrases. There’s a whole story contained in these two clothes. As De Saint Sernin mentioned within the present notes: “Thirty-six looks, each one a heartfelt sentence.”