Celebrities Keep Wearing This Loofah Dress

I only met Oprah three days ago. I broke out into hives. I'm not trying to make you laugh. Like, I legitimately broke out into hives beforehand and I had to really relax and breathe deeply. I think I'm a warm person and when I meet people that I really, really, [UNKNOWN], it's just like, physically I stress out. So yeah, that's what it was like. [MUSIC] First actress that I grew up watching that made me want to act was Audrey Hepburn. I binge watched all of her movies when I was a little kid. There was something about her presence on screen that is so like indescribable and like her face and the way she engages with other actors is so moving. Seeing Breakfast At Tiffany's for the first time was like a very singular experience for the first time because it was like Audrey Hepburn. It was sort of the first time I had seen a film That was older, that had a woman lead that was not very, that was just this strange woman who doesn't have it all together and names her cat, Cat. And all of these things that are strange and weird, and I had never really seen that before And I remember watching that movie and being like that, I want to be in movies. It's not necessarily a first book that ever moved me, but it's like a book in recent memory that has just like changed my views on the world as of recently. The Argonauts by Maggie Nelson. And that kind of like really made me Look at gender in new ways, and look at sexuality in new ways. And think of all of these constructs as just things that were man-made and created, and not inherent. I never literally thought, I'm going to seek out my Instagram or my social media as a place to educate people. It just sort of happened naturally. I feel bad if I'm not informed and if I don't know what's going on. So it's always just been a part of me. And then I think I carry that on Into my social media since they're supposed to represent a part of me. But I learned everything I know about optimism, I didn't learn from adults or I did not learn from teachers, but from teenagers on Tumblr who were teaching me about Angela Davis and Audre Lorde Adrienne Rich and all these people that I would have never ever, ever, ever heard of cuz I'm in a very privileged small circle and Tumblr and teenagers on the Internet really expanded that for me.

Forget Renaissance Art, space-age architecture, and obscure poetry. This season, celebrities seem to be obsessed with a specific Marc Jacobs dress that looks to be inspired by something much more down-to-earth: the shower loofah. Critics say that Jacobs's Spring 2019 collection was inspired by a deep dive into the YSL archives, early Lagerfeld for Chanel, and his own work, but the most popular look — for the Hollywood set, at least — is a frilly, ruffly pink minidress that's got the same undulating ruffles and mille-feuille layers that your shower-caddy standby has.

When the dress came down his glass-tiled runway during New York Fashion Week, Jacobs coordinated it with pretty-in-pink everything. Lipstick, shoes, and even a point d'esprit headpiece were all in matching shades of pink.

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Rowan Blanchard wore Jacobs's look 49 to the InStyle 2019 Golden Globes After Party, where she skipped out on the tonal satin pumps and the shimmering lurex stockings. Instead, she paired the frothy dress with silver sandals and red lipstick.

Rita Ora wore the same dress to promote her new collab with Giuseppe Zanotti. Naturally, she wore her own designs with the pink dress, though there was no taking away from its in-your-face design and over-the-top volume.

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And Saoirse Ronan wore the dress to promote Vanity Fair's 25th annual Hollywood Issue. While she isn't wearing the standout dress on the cover, she did wear it in an Instagram video the magazine posted from the shoot.