Taylor Swift’s Fashion & Street Style Isn’t Bad Taste. It’s Strategy.

Taylor Swift’s Fashion & Street Style Isn’t Bad Taste. It’s Strategy.

Taylor Swift’s Fashion and Street Style are Strategic, Not In Bad Taste.

  • Taylor Swift is a billionaire, but her style still reflects a girl-next-door aesthetic.
  • That’s all strategic.
  • Swift’s inelegant, relatable approach to dressing is an integral part of her public persona.

In December, Taylor Swift — Time’s Person of the Year — glittered in front of the camera in a black bodysuit, a floor-skimming chenille dress, and a studded bustier gown.

At first blush, you wouldn’t know that the chenille dress was one of Alaïa’s most beloved recent offerings or that the bustier gown was the product of NYC-based brand Area, infamous for their campaigns featuring fake eyes and bejeweled death masks. Everything edgy about these original pieces had been sanded and smoothed, rendered inoffensive — just how Swift likes it.

It is easy to forget that, despite selling a whopping 162 million records, Swift is a normal person with normal taste. It is also easy to forget that those record sales allow her an estimated $1.1 billion fortune, enough to wear any designer piece she wants or hire any stylist across the industry.

So why, then, does she insist on mismatched outfits?

A swipe at several Taylor Swift style blogs will reveal trail sneakers with muddy fleeces; Ren Faire-approved dresses with Jean Paul Gaultier boots; and high-heeled Reformation loafers worn oddly with Chiefs sweatshirts. But these outfits aren’t the result of middling taste or fashion faux pas — they’re 100% strategic.

Crafting Swift’s public image

The Swiftian brand philosophy revolves around one essential idea: Taylor Swift is everyone’s best friend. In practice, that’s endearing positivity (like friendship bracelets), starry-eyed intimacy (like coded messages in her videos), and a strong emphasis on personal relatability (like her fashion choices).

Behold: jersey dresses and New Balances.
Gotham/GC Images

Luxury isn’t relatable. Your best friend probably isn’t wearing Balmain. She’s wearing a crochet top from H&M, or trends, like bike shorts and oversized t-shirts, well past their expiration date. Your best friend keeps adding a belt to everything she owns. Your best friend doesn’t know what line or proportion means and doesn’t seem to care.

In that, Swift can transcend ideas of celebrity and instead directly mirror the lives of her fans. Swift sings about the interior worlds of young women; she speaks like them; she even dresses like them, too. To imagine Swift taking aesthetic risks and opting for glamour is to imagine a Swift who actively rejects her audience.

Swift also shops where her fans shop, from Zara to J. Crew — a strategy that has evolved smoothly from era to era. During the release of her 2012 album “Red,” she was frequently spotted in indie-twee polka dots and saddle shoes from then-giants Urban Outfitters and ModCloth. During “Reputation,” she wore Madewell and Forever 21 hoodies; during “Folklore,” Free People and Doên cottage dresses. These choices are attainable, predictable, and unthreatening — purchases made by your best friend during a mall shopping spree.

Lauren Sherman, Fashion Correspondent at Puck News, astutely labeled Swift’s style as “Anthropologie Gone Wild” — mismatched, outdated, pedestrian, but instinctual. “She knows her audience, and everything she does is, in some way or another, catering to that audience, whether it’s purposeful or subconscious,” Sherman tells me.

Swift’s wealth is an aesthetic tool

One of the criticisms frequently levied at Swift is that her wealth allows her to dress lavishly, yet she infrequently does.

According to The New York Times, Swift’s onstage and red carpet stylist is Joseph Cassell Falconer, who dressed Swift for the Eras Tour in bedazzled Zuhair Murad bodysuits and high-performing Louboutin boots. However, there’s no evidence to suggest he’s solely responsible for her candid, off-duty outfits — meaning that Swift’s every day, anodyne choices are her own.

Cookie Cohen, who runs the Instagram account @youbelonginthis — which re-styles Swift’s candid and red carpet outfits — says that Swift’s quiet approach to wealth is doing more harm than good. “Seeing Taylor, someone I feel aligned with, time and again forgoing the resources at her fingertips, feels like a disservice,” Cohen tells me. “From a streetwear standpoint, it’s comforting seeing her in fast fashion we can afford, but with today’s environmental crisis, it’s hard to watch her sometimes promote fast fashion instead of wearing sustainable or substantial vintage pieces that her team could source for her.”

Swift is no stranger to claims of anti-environmentalism, most notably her persistent private jet usage, which led to 8,000 tons of CO2 emissions in 2022. With that in mind, downplaying her wealth is essential to Swift’s public goodwill. A photographed shopping spree here or a ride in a sports car could call her entire brand into question. By dressing blandly, Swift can hide all of that — even if it means wearing Aritzia.

How Swift’s style may change — or not

In recent months (or, if you track things in Eras, since the release of her 2022 album Midnights), Swift has experimented with designer garments and textures, from The Row to Yves Saint Laurent. Despite the higher price point of these pieces, they’re still styled errantly — from floppy proportions to abominable color palettes. The Swiftian brand philosophy churns onward: even your rich best friend can’t build a good outfit.

Cohen makes note of where Swift is lacking. “For red carpet looks, I want simple, elegant, flattering — she constantly misses on all these marks. I don’t want any more silver on her, it washes her out,” she says. “She needs to utilize her long lean body and wear gowns that flatter her. She also over-accessorizes, and it doesn’t even distract from her ill-fitted clothes.”

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