The Best Street Style Beauty at Milan Fashion Week

Best Street Style Beauty at Milan Fashion Week

<cite class="credit">Photographed by Phil Oh</cite>
Photographed by Phil Oh
<cite class="credit">Photographed by Phil Oh</cite>
Photographed by Phil Oh
<cite class="credit">Photographed by Phil Oh</cite>
Photographed by Phil Oh
<cite class="credit">Photographed by Phil Oh</cite>
Photographed by Phil Oh
<cite class="credit">Photographed by Phil Oh</cite>
Photographed by Phil Oh
<cite class="credit">Photographed by Phil Oh</cite>
Photographed by Phil Oh
<cite class="credit">Photographed by Phil Oh</cite>
Photographed by Phil Oh
<cite class="credit">Photographed by Phil Oh</cite>
Photographed by Phil Oh
<cite class="credit">Photographed by Phil Oh</cite>
Photographed by Phil Oh
<cite class="credit">Photographed by Phil Oh</cite>
Photographed by Phil Oh
<cite class="credit">Photographed by Phil Oh</cite>
Photographed by Phil Oh
<cite class="credit">Photographed by Phil Oh</cite>
Photographed by Phil Oh
<cite class="credit">Photographed by Phil Oh</cite>
Photographed by Phil Oh
<cite class="credit">Photographed by Phil Oh</cite>
Photographed by Phil Oh
<cite class="credit">Photographed by Phil Oh</cite>
Photographed by Phil Oh
<cite class="credit">Photographed by Phil Oh</cite>
Photographed by Phil Oh
<cite class="credit">Photographed by Phil Oh</cite>
Photographed by Phil Oh
<cite class="credit">Photographed by Phil Oh</cite>
Photographed by Phil Oh
<cite class="credit">Photographed by Phil Oh</cite>
Photographed by Phil Oh

Season after season, the artistic, otherworldly intellectual—think Marni’s retro-future fairies or Prada’s multifaceted pixies—never fails to surface as Milan’s style icon. And whether on the catwalk or traipsing the sidewalks within reach of Phil Oh’s sartorial lens, aspirational beauty was the standard this week—from hyper-chromatic bobs and braids to fresh-from-a-facial glowing skin.

Untouched by their owners, natural curls kept on floating freely. After her walk at Fendi, model Olivia Ventin’s pre-Raphaelite waves (which flew under the runway radar thanks to Sam McKnight’s twisted topknots) were let loose into a burst of golden spirals, making even a rumpled, tucked-in, boyfriend button-down shirt look heavenly. Just outside of the show, and admittedly “banging out print on print looks,” stylist Chloe Hill added yet another dimension to her checkered suit with a tousled fringe of corkscrew bangs and enthusiastic grin.

Back on the color spectrum, one of fashion’s favorite twins Ami and Aya Suzuki returned to the spotlight as their infamous bubblegum bobs, ruby red lips, and porcelain skin lured gazes like moths to the flame. It-girls showed a mastery not only of deep cuts, but of dip-dye jobs too—like Sita Abellan’s flirty blue flip, or Siobhan Bell’s bright platinum lengths, which were pulled into the knife-sharp center part that’s become an Italian standard. And for Gilda Ambrosio, who’s made the symmetrical hair trick her signature, even head-to-toe liquid lurex and electro mirrored sunglasses looked effortless thanks to the classic beauty trope and a luminous, seemingly pore-less complexion. For resident bombshells and stylish show-hoppers, such daytime-to-disco appropriate looks are key for a seamless downshift into afterparty mode—just in time for Paris.


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