Anna Wintour was spotted committing the style sin of wearing the same outfit two days apart in Milan and Paris as she stepped out during the city’s annual Fashion Weeks.
The fashion legend, 75, was captured while out and about in Milan on Friday as she donned a stylish grey print Thom Browne maxi coat.
Looking typically fashionable as she strutted the streets of the Italian city, she added a floral maxi dress teamed with snake-skin knee-high boots, and her trademark dark shades.
But on Monday, as the Vogue editor head off to Paris to continue her run of Fashion Weeks – she was spotted in the exact same ensemble.
She added a dazzling necklace made of colourful pearls and added a chic handbag for her night outing in the French capital.
Anna Wintour, 75, appeared to have lost her luggage after she was spotted wearing the same outfit two days apart in Milan (pictured) and Paris as she stepped out during Fashion Week
Anna’s sightings come after fans raised their concern that this year’s ‘boring’ Met Gala theme will lead to lackluster looks on fashion’s biggest night.
As is tradition, the first Monday in May 2025 will see the most famous names in the business showcase their interpretation of this year’s theme – Superfine: Tailoring Black Style.
The pH๏τos taken of the celebrities walking up the staircase of New York City’s Metropolitan Museum of Art will be judged by fashion lovers all over the globe.
But judgement has already begun after Vogue confirmed that the dress code for the night is ‘Tailored for you.’
Fans flocked to X, formerly Twitter, to express concern that the simplistic theme would lead to visually disappointing affair.
‘Met Gala theme boring again ohhhh sis we’re sleepy,’ one user commented.
Another wrote: ‘The amount of men that will wear tailored black suits to the Met Gala….’
‘Another boring Met Gala yay,’ a third user tweeted, while another stated: ‘The Met Gala theme is out, men better not be boring this year.’
The fashion legend, 75, was captured while out and about in Milan on Friday as she donned a stylish grey print Thom Browne maxi coat
Juggling her busy schedule, Anna was snapped attending the star-studded Tod’s Fall RTW 2025 runway show in Milan (pictured)
But on Monday, as the Vogue editor head off to Paris to continue her run of Fashion Weeks – she was spotted in the exact same ensemble
She added a dazzling necklace made of colourful pearls and added a chic handbag for her night outing in the French capital
Read More Met Gala fans FURIOUS over this year’s ‘boring’ theme as Vogue announces A-list host committee
For this year’s gala, every chair or committee member is black except for Vogue Editor-in-chief Anna Wintour, who has the lead chairperson for the event since the 1990s.
NBA superstar LeBron James is the honorary chair, while Colman Domingo, Lewis Hamilton, A$AP Rocky, and Pharrell Williams are the other co-chairs for the event.
The rest of the committee members include artist André 3000, author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, global athletes Simone Biles and Jonathan Owens, designer Grace Wales Bonner and painter Jordan Casteel.
Designer and fashion тιтan Dapper Dan, rapper Doechii, actress Ayo Edebiri, respected fashion editor Edward Enninful and playwrights Jeremy O. Harris and Branden Jacobs-Jenkins are also on the committee.
While artist Rashid Johnson, actress and director Regina King, filmmaker Spike Lee and author Tonya Lewis Lee, actress Audra McDonald, musician Janelle Monáe, actor Jeremy Pope will join them
Elsewhere, athletes Angel Reese and Sha’Carri Richardson, designer Olivier Rousteing, singer Tyla, R&B icon Usher, and lauded artist Kara Walker round out the group.
When the theme was announced last October, it sparked fears of an ‘appropriation disaster’ from fashion fans.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City revealed that the Costume Insтιтute’s spring 2025 exhibition Superfine: Tailoring Black Style was inspired by Monica L. Miller’s 2009 book, Slaves to Fashion: Black Dandyism and the Styling of Black Diasporic Idenтιтy.
According to Vogue, the exhibit is going to include garments, paintings and pH๏τographs that explore ‘the indelible style of Black men in the context of dandyism, from the 18th-century through present day.