YOU GOT THE LOOK
NYT’S 65 MOST STYLISH ‘PEOPLE’ OF 2022
High and low. Fun and serious. Curious and open-minded. Revelling in characters. Appreciating the material world. Inviting everyone to the party. All of these are ways that The New York Times’ Styles desk defines its approach to whom and what it covers.
Equal parts stylish and Styles-ish, the “people” on this list — who are presented in no particular order — include politicians and celebrities and athletes and influencers and fictional characters from TV and film. Some of them appeared in the Styles section this year. Others simply captured our attention.
Love them or hate them, all have at least one thing in common. At some point over the past 12 months, they made us talk — about how we dress, how we live and how we choose to express ourselves. We welcome dissent. But we are, without a doubt, correct.
Rihanna
From the moment she revealed her pregnancy via a not-accidental “accidental” photoshoot, her growing belly — in all its bare, distended gloriousness — was impossible to ignore.
Ben Affleck
Since getting back together with Jennifer Lopez, he has submitted without apparent resistance to a glow-up, going from Dunkin’ to Gucci in less than a year.
Martha Stewart
It took an apron and little else for Stewart to demonstrate that thirst traps have no age limits.
Serena Williams
The tennis player went out with a bang in a little black dress.
Bad Bunny
The Puerto Rican reggaetonero subverted gender norms by wearing a Burberry trench dress to his first Met Gala, and then made an even stronger statement when he smooched a male dancer onstage at the MTV Video Music Awards.
Florence Pugh
Three words: Valentino revenge dress.
Lizzo
When the singer wasn’t pulling out a flute on red carpets, she was playing a crystal one made for President James Madison in 1813 — and designing (and modelling) a new shapewear collection, Yitty.
Eileen Gu
The freestyle skier and breakout Winter Olympics star made helmet hair chic.
Andrés in
Blue hair is one of the milder fashion statements made by Andrés, portrayed by Julio Torres, whose surrealist style was on full display when he showed up to a job selling staircases wearing a sequined headpiece shaped like a staircase.
Los Espookys Úrsula in Los Espookys
The clothes worn by Úrsula, portrayed by Cassandra Ciangherotti, are less flashy and eccentric. But few hairstyles convey more self-assuredness than her out-of-its-time half updo.
Sydney Carter
A basketball player turned coach at Texas A&M University, Carter has redefined what a game-day wardrobe can be by choosing outfits that show off her personal style, like the white turtleneck she paired with bubble gum pink leather pants and high heels.
Ryan Gosling as Ken
There may be many Kens in the forthcoming Barbie movie, but the shinychested, platinum-haired version portrayed by Gosling melted brains like a Mattel doll on fire.
Emma Corrin
The actor, who this year became the first nonbinary person to cover Vogue, has captivated red-carpet watchers by dressing both elegant (a black Miu Miu leotard and cape at the Toronto International Film Festival) and whimsical (a Loewe balloon dress at the Olivier Awards).
Jobu Tupaki in Everything Everywhere All At Once
Even an Elvis costume could not overwhelm Jobu Tupaki, portrayed by actress Stephanie Hsu, who brazenly pulled off just about every look in the multiverse.
Kate Bush Her 1985 song Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God)
reached an entirely new audience — and the tops of singles charts in Britain and the United States — when the track became the song of the summer after being featured on the latest season of Stranger Things.
Doja Cat
Lots of people have shaved their heads, but far fewer have simultaneously shaved their eyebrows. And fewer still have done both on Instagram Live.
Bella Hadid
The feline model has continued to shatter records for magazine covers, ad campaigns and mileage clocked on catwalks (in both couture and spray-on clothing).
Oswaldo Cabrera
As a rookie on the notoriously clean-cut New York Yankees, Cabrera won over fans by pairing a beaded necklace with his pinstripes.
Oliver Putnam in
Only Murders In The Building
Among the questions left unanswered in the dark comedy’s latest season: Just where does Oliver, portrayed by Martin Short, get all those fabulous scarves?
Honey Dijon
Madonna’s “favourite DJ in the whole world” received a Grammy nomination for her work on Beyoncé’s Renaissance album and, in November, accepted a queer visionary award from the Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art.
Héctor Bellerín
Lots of soccer players look good in their jerseys. But few if any look as stylish in anything else as Bellerín, a fullback for FC Barcelona.
Mary J. Blige
Her snow-leopard-inspired Peter Dundas look at the Super Bowl LVI halftime show was one for the fashion hall of fame.
Keke Palmer
The actress affectionately known as Keke “Keep a Job” Palmer by fans had no trouble keeping the attention of fashion obsessives this year, whether
on screen (with her wardrobe of vintage rock tees in the film Nope), on the red carpet (in looks such as a fuchsia tulle Christian Siriano dress) or in magazines (wearing a white mesh minidress on the cover of Glamour’s July issue).
Heidi Klum As ‘The Worm’
No one captured the existential horror of “sexy Halloween” quite like she did this year.
Antwaun Sargent
The curator of the Brooklyn Museum’s Virgil Abloh retrospective demonstrated how effectively a good hat can establish a signature look.
Spotted Lanternfly
If looks could kill, as they say. Sadly, these ones do. Nevertheless, the mature bugs’ wings — pale gray with elegant black dots and a flash of scarlet red — made a serious visual statement as the insects fluttered farther into the United States.
Anne Hathaway
The actress has fallen in and out of fashion favour. This year she was very much in, in no small part for dressing like Andrea Sachs, her character in The Devil Wears Prada.
Lewis Hamilton
It was a bad year for the British Formula One driver on the track. But he was far more successful when it came to getting dressed, wearing Valentino pink suiting on the cover of Vanity Fair’s September issue, Kenzo and Versace knits in pit lane and, to the chagrin of the sport’s governing body, lots (and lots) of bling.
Kourtney Kardashian and Travis Barker
Despite the obvious Dolce & Gabbana sponsorship of their wedding in Portofino, Italy, they looked good at that gilded altar.
Beanie Feldstein
Was she terrible in Funny Girl? Yes. Did she look great on that Gucci billboard? Also yes.
Maddy Perez in Euphoria
Gen Z largely has Maddy, portrayed by Alexa Demie, to thank for bringing 90s and Y2K style back.
Willow Pill
It had been years since the main stage of RuPaul’s Drag Race featured a performer as visually inventive as the Season 14 winner.
Lil Nas X
His outfit at the MTV Video Music Awards — a bare chest with a feathered headpiece and skirt by Harris Reed, who dressed the model Iman in a similar look at last year’s Met Gala — proved the rapper’s mastery of irreverence and references.
Deborah Vance in Hacks
Vance, portrayed by Jean Smart, oozes style and sass in a way not seen since Joan Rivers.
Brad Pitt
Nobody has ever looked as good playing dead on the cover of GQ.
Carmy and Richie in
The Bear Carmy, portrayed by Jeremy Allen White, favoured vintage denim, tight white T-shirts and wool stadium jackets. Richie, portrayed by Ebon MossBachrach, had a penchant for Adidas high-tops, track pants and gas-station sunglasses. Together, their wardrobes struck the perfect balance of classic and chaotic.
Gabriella Karefa-Johnson
The fashion editor and stylist dressed some of the world’s most famous women, including Serena Williams and Bella Hadid, for covers of Vogue this year. She was also an unapologetic champion of inclusivity, as shown by her forceful criticism of Ye for wearing a White Lives Matter sweatshirt at Paris Fashion Week.
Jeremy O. Harris
While seemingly always wearing Gucci, the playwright somehow always looked himself.
Joan Didion
The writer’s Céline sunglasses sold for US$27,000 (936,000 baht) at auction this year. $27,000!
Sheryl Lee Ralph
On red carpets, the actress took bold, youthful turns — hot pink at the American Music Awards, a thigh-baring gown at the Emmys — that turned many a head.
Pearl in Pearl
Pearl, portrayed by Mia Goth, earned a place in the pantheon of stylish scream queens with her blood-red dress, lacy blue bow, smudged makeup, boots… and axe.
The Linda Lindas
Whether in thrifted dresses, baggy pants and graphic tees, or in pastel suits from Opening Ceremony, the teens and tweens in the Los Angeles punk band — Mila de la Garza, Lucia de la Garza, Eloise Wong and Bela Salazar — dressed how girls their age should: by staying true to themselves and having a lot of fun.
Chloë Sevigny
Her Mugler bodysuit made a stunning wedding “dress”.
Timothée Chalamet
His fashion foreplay — going shirtless at the Oscars, and backless in a red halter top at the Venice Film Festival — wasn’t camp, it was cool.
Grace Wales Bonner
The designer’s menswear show at Pitti Uomo in Florence might have been the highlight of the style year.
Sarah Sherman
As she settled into her role as a Saturday Night Live cast member, Sherman managed to pull off an aesthetic that deftly mixed “clown” and “horror”.
Bowen Yang
Few people seemed to have more fun on red carpets than the actor and podcast host, who always appeared so genuinely comfortable and happy in what he was wearing.
Dimitry in
Triangle Of Sadness Dimitry, the pink-polo-shirt-wearing excrement salesman portrayed by Zlatko Buric, embodied the dissipation of indulgence.
Emma Chamberlain
It has become a kind of impossible to stand out at the Met Gala. But thanks to a midriff-baring Louis Vuitton gown, the vlogger managed to do so while interviewing guests on the red carpet.
Ziwe
The comedian and talk show host’s audacious Barbie style has fortunately only become more audacious.
Queen Elizabeth II
The hats. The hair. The handbags. For 70 years, Elizabeth II was not just the queen but the defining image of one.
Princess Anne
The naval uniform she wore at the funeral of her mother, Queen Elizabeth II, and the wraparound sunglasses in which she has travelled the globe were both reminders that princesses can have an edge.
Kate Berlant in Kate
The actress’ outfit for her one-woman show — a black tank top and belted black jeans — flayed every trope of confessional theater, and then a few more.
Kendrick Lamar
The rapper has been known more for his lyrical style than his personal style, but he took his outfits to new places this year, including at Coachella, where he performed in a tonal black denim look that got hypebeasts talking.
Tracee Ellis Ross in The Hair Tales Each hairstyle worn by Ross in the Hulu docuseries was more incredible than the last.
Mark Zuckerberg’s Avatar
Meta may not have taken off as Zuckerberg had hoped, but his metaverse avatar’s shrunken Thom Browne suit sent a serious message to fashion designers: A new market was theirs for the taking.
Kahlana Barfield Brown
The fashion and beauty editor entered the big (box) leagues with a buzzy new collection for Target.
Nathan Fielder
Any lingering discourse about workfrom-home style ended when the comedian wore that laptop harness on The Rehearsal.
Lydia Tár in Tár
Tár, the jet-setting, power-mad maestro portrayed by Cate Blanchett, made a strong case for finding a good tailor — and playing Gustav Mahler on repeat.
Beyoncé
Though her public appearances were rare, the singer’s Renaissance album art, I’m That Girl teaser video and advertisements for Tiffany & Co provided plenty of sartorial eye candy.
Tanya McQuoid in The White Lotus Portrayed by Jennifer Coolidge, Tanya’s Monica Vitti moment in Sicily was the stuff of mood-board legend. As was her “big beautiful ass in an amazing symphony of salmon”.
Maeve Reilly
Watching how the stylist dresses clients like Megan Fox, Lori Harvey and Hailey Bieber is almost as exciting as watching what she wears herself.
Zendaya
From vintage Balmain at the NAACP Image Awards to channelling Audrey Hepburn in Valentino at the Emmys, the actor owned every red carpet she stepped on.
Elvis in
Elvis
In the hands of Baz Luhrmann and Catherine Martin, Elvis, portrayed by Austin Butler, was as much a symbol of gender-fluid fashion as any contemporary pop star.
Harry Styles
The most memorable element of Harry’s House? The sequined jumpsuits in Harry’s tour wardrobe.