New York Post

TAY’S ‘TORTURED’ HEART ON DISPLAY

Swift’s frocks are instant classics

- By ELANA FISHMAN

She’s a poet and she knows it. As Taylor Swift’s music has evolved, so has her style — from cowboy-booted, curly-haired country sweetheart to crop topclad pop phenomenon.

But while she’s previously drawn fashion inspiratio­n from fairytales (for 2010’s “Speak Now), 1950s housewives (2012’s “Red”) and wood nymphs (2020’s “Folklore”), to name a few, Swift’s been looking somewhere more literary for her outfits leading up to the release of her new album, “The Tortured Poets Department” — the wardrobes of the great wordsmiths who came before her.

“There’s definitely a ‘literary academia’ style that’s going on,” says Sarah Chapelle, the brains behind the popular Taylor Swift Style Instagram and blog.

Her book about Tay’s style evolution, “Taylor Swift Style: Fashion Through the Eras,” is out in October.

“Though we don’t have as many visuals to go on as we have in eras past,” she tells Page Six Style, “the ones we do have are telling a very cohesive story, which is clearly pointing to being inspired by female poets of the past.”

In her lit era

The 14-time Grammy winner began dropping hints about the direction of her next musical era way back in the fall, stepping out in a series of preppy street style looks built around checked coats, pleated skirts, stacked loafers and cashmere sweaters that could’ve been plucked from Sylvia Plath’s closet.

“Taylor, I feel, is somebody who’s a little bit of a history nerd,” Chapelle says. “She’s obviously referenced being inspired by other literary works in the past, so I feel like there’s a baseline here . . . as she enters this world of an album that, I suspect, is a little more cerebral. She’s already advising fans to break out our dictionari­es!”

Plath shared more in common with Swift than a way with prose and plaid; the late “Bell Jar” scribe was also famously fond of scarlet lipstick, with her husband Ted Hughes once recalling in a poem, “Red was your colour . . . Your lips a dipped, deep crimson.”

She shared the songstress’ appetite for era-by-era experiment­ation, too, writing in her journals, “Why can’t I try on different lives, like dresses, to see which fits best and is more becoming?”

But Plath’s not the only fellow poet Swift’s seemingly pinned to her style mood board lately. It can’t be a coincidenc­e that to announce her new album’s impending arrival at February’s Grammys, she chose to wear a corseted Schiaparel­li Haute Couture gown in a color synonymous with Emily Dickinson (her sixth cousin three times removed, as genealogy company Ancestry recently revealed).

The Amherst author was known for dressing “wholly in white,” and her sole surviving garment — an ivory shirt dress with lace trim and mother-of-pearl buttons — suggests as much.

Swift wears a similarly billowy white button-up on the cover of one of the vinyl versions of “The Tortured Poets Department,” striking a pensive pose on a seaside cliff in the austere blackand-white snap.

Seeing as she once dedicated an entire poem to a stopped clock, Dickinson would’ve surely also appreciate­d Swift’s choice of jewelry for the Grammys: a Lorraine Schwartz choker fashioned from an antique wristwatch set to midnight, a nod to the title of her 2022 studio album.

“She’s wearing this vintage accessory to note that her previous era is coming to a close, in order to usher in the new one,” Chapelle hypothesiz­es.

That dazzling diamond timepiece isn’t the only horologica­l accessory Swift’s reached for recently, however.

She’s also been spotted wearing a gold Tilly Sveaas T-bar necklace inspired by the classic watch chain — a piece “inspired by the past and created for the now,” as the jeweler told Page Six Style.

Traditiona­lly worn to secure the wearer’s pocket watch, such chains were particular­ly popular in the Victorian era; 19th-century portraits of poetry power couple Elizabeth Barrett Browning and husband Robert Browning (the Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce of their time, you might say) show the pair with the telltale chains peeking out from their waistcoats.

‘Intimate’

Swift’s even made corsets her sartorial signature in the months leading up to her latest album drop — sporting boned bustier tops everywhere from the streets of NYC to football stadiums.

But while past-century women poets like Browning and Dickinson were made to wear traditiona­l tight-laced styles to conform to the wasp-waisted beauty ideals of their day, the singer’s decision to don modern versions of the corset takes the long-controvers­ial garment out of context.

“Corsetry was once something worn only under clothing — it was an intimate,” Chapelle says. “Taylor’s work is nothing if not intimate, and she’s played her whole career wearing her heart on her sleeve. This just feel like a more sensual, womanly example of wearing something meant to be on the inside on the outside — showing that kind of vulnerabil­ity.”

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 ?? ?? ‘LITERARY ACADEMIA’: Taylor Swift’s latest “era” of style — including watch fob necklaces (left) and preppy plaid (above right) — takes inspiratio­n from Robert Browning (clockwise), Sylvia Plath and Elizabeth Barrett Browning.
‘LITERARY ACADEMIA’: Taylor Swift’s latest “era” of style — including watch fob necklaces (left) and preppy plaid (above right) — takes inspiratio­n from Robert Browning (clockwise), Sylvia Plath and Elizabeth Barrett Browning.
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 ?? ?? RHYME & REASON: EmDIckinso­n ily (left) wore flowing white (sole surviving dress, above) — a look donned by TaySwift lor at the Grammys. Swift’s watch choker also recalled a Dickinson poem.
RHYME & REASON: EmDIckinso­n ily (left) wore flowing white (sole surviving dress, above) — a look donned by TaySwift lor at the Grammys. Swift’s watch choker also recalled a Dickinson poem.

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