Kendall Jenner Just Ditched Her LBDs in Favor of This Expensive-Looking Color Trend
If Kendall Jenner specifically asked her stylist Dani Michelle to make her look extra rich throughout her trip to Paris Fashion Week, Michelle—who also works with Bruna Marquezine, Hailey Bieber, Daisy Edgar-Jones, and Rosie Huntington-Whiteley—has overperformed. She's done it in a number of ways, like dressing Jenner in The Row, Bottega Veneta, Hermès, and vintage Alaïa, but the most effective of them all was her decision to dress the supermodel in a number of monochromatic navy-blue looks, a color that's been known to look expensive for decades.
The first time saw Jenner in an archival John Galliano dress with a scooped neckline, fitted bodice, and knee-length hemline. She styled the piece practically on its own—as it deserves to be—apart from The Row Claudette flats and oval sunglasses, letting it be the star.
On Kendall Jenner: The Row flats; John Galliano dress
After returning to the Ritz to change, Jenner was again spotted in navy later that day, this time in The Row from head to toe (minus her Méga earrings). The newly blonde Jenner wore look 14 from the brand's Resort 2025 collection to attend its top-secret and camera-free Paris Fashion Week show. The look features a nipped-in tunic with raw hems and a built-in knee-length skirt as well as point-toe kitten-heel pumps and a black clutch purse with a detachable shoulder strap. (Jenner wore it as a clutch, whereas the lookbook shows it with the strap in use.) For good measure, she topped off the outfit with some oversize sunglasses.
On Jenner: The Row shoes, top, and skirt; Méga earrings
If you're not yet convinced that looking wealthy and wearing navy go hand in hand, I don't know what to tell you. If you are, scroll down to shop some of the chicest navy picks you can get your hands on right now.

Eliza Huber is currently the Associate Editorial Director at Who What Wear. She joined the company in 2021 as a fashion editor after starting her career as a writer at Refinery29, where she worked for four years. During her time at WWW, she launched Go Sports, the publication's sports vertical, and published four (and counting) quarterly issues tied to the WNBA, Formula One, and more. She also created two franchises, Let's Get a Room and Ways to Wear; profiled Dakota Fanning, Diane Kruger, Katie Holmes, Gracie Abrams, and Sabrina Carpenter for WWW's monthly cover features; and reported on new seasonal trends, up-and-coming designers, and celebrity style.