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Zendaya's Most Iconic Style Moments and How to Recreate Them at Every Size
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Zendaya's Most Iconic Style Moments and How to Recreate Them at Every Size

Tanya Fields
By Tanya FieldsFashion EditorJune 27, 2026 · 11 min read
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Picture the moment a stylist waved a smoke-emitting wand at the 2019 Met Gala and a grey silk gown slowly lit up and shifted to a glowing pale blue, transforming a young star into Cinderella on the steps of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. That theatrical light-up Tommy Hilfiger dress, complete with a pumpkin-coach clutch and clear glass-slipper heels, was not a fluke or a one-off costume. It was the clearest possible signal that something new was happening on red carpets, and that two people had figured out how to make fashion tell a story.

The woman in the gown was already famous. The man with the wand was Law Roach, and together they have spent more than a decade building a body of work that most of us now treat as a fashion vocabulary. The best part for the rest of us is that the principles underneath their biggest looks have nothing to do with sample sizes or a particular body type. They have everything to do with intention, fit, and the confidence to commit to an idea. Those things scale to any size, any budget, and any closet.

Why Her Style Actually Works: The Law Roach Method

Why Her Style Actually Works: The Law Roach Method

Roach does not call himself a stylist. He prefers “image architect,” and once you understand the difference, his whole approach makes sense. An architect does not just pick pretty objects. An architect designs around a purpose, a setting, and a story. He has worked with this client since her Disney Channel days back in 2011, which means the looks we admire are the product of years of trust, not a single lucky pull from a showroom.

The signature of their partnership is something the fashion world has come to call “method dressing.” When she promotes a film, her red-carpet wardrobe becomes an extension of the character and the world of that movie. The clothes argue a point. They are never just expensive fabric on a famous person.

Here is the takeaway that matters for you. The reason these looks land is not the four-figure designer label. It is the clarity of the concept and the precision of the fit. A gown that fits beautifully and says something deliberate will always outperform a “perfect” dress worn with no point of view. That equation does not change based on the number on your tag. Great style has always been about confidence and fit, full stop, and both of those are available to every single one of us.

The Joan of Arc Armor: Strength as a Silhouette

The Joan of Arc Armor: Strength as a Silhouette

For the 2018 Met Gala and its “Heavenly Bodies” theme, she arrived in a custom silver Versace gown built to look like armor, complete with chain-mail detailing, a copper-red bob, and metallic Jimmy Choo heels. Roach has said the Joan of Arc idea came to him in a dream. The look read as power, faith, and unbothered strength all at once.

To recreate this energy at any size, you are chasing metallic shine and structure, not literal chain mail. Look for a column or sheath gown in liquid silver, pewter, or gunmetal lame, ideally with a bit of body to the fabric so it skims rather than clings. A high neck or a strong shoulder gives you that protected, statuesque feeling. Curvy and plus-size shoppers can find metallic and sequin column gowns through Eloquii, Lane Bryant, and Azazie, with formal pieces typically running anywhere from $90 to $250.

Proportion tip: if a full metallic gown feels like a lot, pull the same idea into a metallic pleated maxi skirt with a fitted black top, or a one-shoulder metallic top with wide trousers. The armor feeling comes from the gleam and the clean lines, and you control how much skin and how much shine you want.

The Cinderella Gown: Romance Without the Costume

The Cinderella Gown: Romance Without the Costume

That 2019 light-up Cinderella moment was technically spectacular, but you do not need animatronics to capture it. Strip the gown back to its bones and it is a full-skirted pale-blue ball gown with puff sleeves, worn with clear heels and a fairy-tale clutch. That is a deeply recreatable fantasy.

Reach for a soft pastel ball gown or fit-and-flare in powder blue, lavender, or icy silver. A defined waist and a generous skirt give you the storybook proportion, and a puff or off-shoulder sleeve adds the romance. Brands like David’s Bridal carry formal and ball-gown silhouettes up to size 30, and Ever-Pretty offers princess-style gowns in extended sizing often between $60 and $120, which makes this one of the more affordable icons to chase.

For curves specifically, a corset or boned bodice does real work here. It supports the bust, defines the waist, and lets the skirt do its dramatic thing without the top half feeling unsupported. Add clear or metallic heels and a small embellished bag, and you have the fairy tale without spending a fortune or pretending you have a smoke machine.

The Mugler Robot Suit: Sci-Fi Confidence

The Mugler Robot Suit: Sci-Fi Confidence

At the February 2024 London premiere of “Dune: Part Two,” she wore an archival cyborg suit from Thierry Mugler’s fall 1995 couture collection, with sculpted silver panels, sheer plexiglass inserts, built-in gloves, and matching silver heels. It is one of the most talked-about pieces of method dressing of the decade, a genuine collector’s grail pulled from the archive.

No one expects you to source a 1995 Mugler couture robot. What you can borrow is the futurism: metallics, sharp paneling, and a body-skimming line that celebrates your shape instead of disguising it. The whole point of that suit was that it traced and honored the body underneath, which is a wonderfully size-inclusive idea once you separate it from the runway provenance.

Try a metallic or liquid-finish midi dress with seaming or paneling that follows your curves, or a structured silver corset top with high-shine trousers. Universal Standard, which runs sizes 00 through 40 and is built specifically around fit across that full range, is a strong place to look for sculptural, body-skimming pieces. Pair the look with pointed metallic heels and minimal jewelry so the silhouette stays the star. The confidence reads as futuristic; the fit reads as intentional.

The Met Gala Garden Gown: Drama by the Layer

The Met Gala Garden Gown: Drama by the Layer

The 2024 Met Gala theme was “The Garden of Time,” and she answered with a custom Maison Margiela gown by John Galliano in deep blue and green, with layers of lame and organza draped into a peacock-inspired sweep and a resting hummingbird detail near the collarbone. Later that same night she changed into a sweeping archival Givenchy ball gown from spring 1996. Two looks, one garden, total commitment.

The recreatable lesson here is layering and jewel tones. You are looking for movement, drape, and a rich palette of emerald, sapphire, teal, and peacock blue. A draped one-shoulder gown, a gown with an organza overlay, or a satin column with a sheer caped detail all capture that lush garden mood.

Curvy bodies and draped fabrics are a beautiful match, because soft draping moves with you and adds dimension rather than flattening your shape. Anthropologie’s extended-size range and Eloquii both carry jewel-tone occasion dresses with interesting necklines and drape, generally in the $130 to $300 range. If a floral or botanical print speaks to you, that is fully on theme too. The garden was always about abundance, and abundance is a body-positive idea at its core.

The White Drop-Waist Gown: Quiet Power

Not every icon shouts. At the Paris premiere of “Challengers” in 2024, she wore a custom white Louis Vuitton gown: a strapless, drop-waist column with a structured bodice that flowed into a soft floor-length skirt, finished with a crisp white crisscross belt at the waist. Clean, modern, and unforgettable precisely because it was so restrained.

This is one of the most wearable icons on the list, and white or ivory occasion dresses are widely available in extended sizes. The drop waist is the detail to chase, because it lengthens the line and places the fullest part of the skirt below the hip, which reads as elegant on every body. A structured strapless or halter bodice gives the support a column gown needs.

For larger busts, look for built-in boning, power-mesh lining, or a halter neckline for extra hold, all of which brands like Jovani build into their extended-size gowns specifically for support and shape. A defined belt or sash at the natural or dropped waist pulls the whole thing together. Ivory column gowns turn up at Universal Standard, Azazie, and Lane Bryant, often between $100 and $260, making this red-carpet quiet-luxury look genuinely attainable.

The White Suit: Tailoring Is Glamour

For the 2025 Met Gala and its “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style” theme, she skipped a gown entirely and wore an all-white Louis Vuitton three-piece suit: wide bellbottom trousers, a single-breasted blazer with sharp lapels, a vest with small silver buttons, a shirt and tie, a coordinating hat, and a Bulgari serpent jewel at the collar. It was a love letter to dandyism and a reminder that suiting can be the most glamorous thing in the room.

A great suit is arguably the most size-inclusive icon of them all, because tailoring is, by definition, fit made visible. The move is monochrome, head to toe in one color, which creates a long, powerful line. White, cream, ivory, or a rich jewel tone all work beautifully.

For curves, the secret is the tailor, which we will get to in a moment, but the starting points are strong. Eloquii and Universal Standard both make extended-size suiting designed to actually fit a fuller bust and hip, with blazers and wide-leg trousers that you can buy as separates so each piece fits on its own terms. A waistcoat under the blazer adds that dandy polish and gives you a defined middle. Finish with a bold lip, a sleek shoe, and one striking piece of jewelry. You will own any room you walk into.

The Tenniscore Moment: Playful Precision

The 2024 “Challengers” press tour gave us “tenniscore,” and it was pure joy. In Rome, she wore a custom Loewe dress with a pleated skirt and stilettos with actual tennis balls at the base of the heels. At the Australian premiere, a custom Loewe gown carried a tennis-player-and-ball motif. Roach said outright that he wanted to be literal and bring tenniscore to the masses, and he did.

This is the most fun and the most budget-friendly icon to translate, because it lives in the world of preppy sportswear made elegant. Think crisp pleated skirts, polo collars, fresh white and green, and clean knit dresses. A pleated midi skirt with a fitted polo or knit top nails the vibe instantly, and you can build it from pieces you may already own.

Extended-size pleated skirts and polo dresses are easy to find at retailers like Old Navy, ASOS Curve, and Eloquii, usually well under $90. For a curvy frame, a pleated skirt that sits at your natural waist with a slightly cropped or tucked top keeps the proportion balanced and sporty rather than shapeless. The whole tenniscore idea proves a quiet truth that runs through every look on this list: style is a game of ideas, and anyone can play it well.

A Real Word on Tailoring and Fit for Curves

Here is the thing the magazines rarely say out loud. Almost every gown and suit she wears is custom-made or tailored within an inch of its life. The fit you admire is not luck and it is not the size of her body. It is craft. That is genuinely good news, because tailoring is the most democratic tool in fashion.

A $90 dress that has been taken in at the waist, hemmed to your exact height, and adjusted at the bust will look more expensive and more “right” than a $400 dress straight off the rack. For curvy and plus-size bodies especially, alterations close the gap that ready-to-wear leaves behind, because mass sizing is built on averages and your body is specifically yours. Common, affordable fixes include taking in a waist that gapes while the hips fit, shortening straps, hemming length, and adding boning or cups to a bodice for support.

A few practical notes. Buy for your largest measurement, usually the bust or hips, and have the rest brought in. Build a relationship with a local tailor and bring the shoes you plan to wear so hems land correctly. Treat alterations as part of the cost of an outfit, not an afterthought. None of this is about hiding or shrinking anything. It is about making the clothes serve your body instead of asking your body to serve the clothes.

Where to Shop the Vibes

A quick map of where these looks actually live in extended sizes. Universal Standard runs 00 to 40 and is built around consistent fit across that entire range, which makes it a reliable home base for column gowns and suiting. Eloquii leans into occasion drama, jewel tones, and statement tailoring. Lane Bryant and David’s Bridal cover formal gowns and ball-gown silhouettes well into size 30. Azazie and Jovani both build support into extended-size eveningwear, with Jovani engineering boning and power mesh into curvier cuts. Ever-Pretty delivers princess and ball-gown shapes at the friendliest prices. For the playful and the everyday, ASOS Curve, Old Navy, and Anthropologie’s extended range round things out. Across all of them, expect occasion pieces to land roughly between $60 and $300 depending on fabric and structure.

Steal the Confidence, Not Just the Dress

Look back across all eight of these moments and the labels change every time. Versace, Tommy Hilfiger, Mugler, Margiela, Louis Vuitton, Loewe. What never changes is the method: pick an idea, commit to it completely, and make sure the thing fits like it was built for the body wearing it. That formula belongs to no one and it belongs to everyone.

So tonight, open your closet and pull the metallic top you have been saving, or that jewel-tone dress that has hung untouched since last winter. Try the white suit on with a bold lip. Pin the waist where you want a tailor to take it in. Wave your own wand at whatever you already own, then book the alteration and wear it like the room was waiting for you. It was.

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