Lila Moss's Boho Miniskirt Feels Fresh For 2025 | British Vogue
Published 6 hours ago• 2 minute read
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had just released her fifth record, La Maison où j'ai grandi, when Yves Saint Laurent launched its Rive Gauche line. It would be the first time the house turned its focus from the hauteur of the couture salon to the energy of the streets below – a distinct moment in time that Anthony Vaccarello called on for his pre-fall 2025 collection: badass leather jackets, croc-effect pencil skirts, vintage-y blousons and waterfall skirts with floor-length ruffles.
Lila Moss was the first to debut that maxi-turned-micro skirt – styled with a long-sleeve sheer tee and T-bar pumps à la Mathilda Gvarliani’s turn in the brand’s pre-fall lookbook – at last night’s spring/summer 2026 Saint Laurent presentation at Paris’s historic Bourse de Commerce. Brat at the front, boho at the back, the look might have been inspired by the swinging sixties, but it feels just as much a time capsule of 2025, where abbreviated hemlines and Arcadian flounce seem to be in constant collision.
Lila Moss at the Saint Laurent spring/summer 2026 men’s presentation at Paris Fashion Week.
Stephane Cardinale - Corbis/Getty Images
Moss was part of what must have been the starriest guest list of the season – Rami Malek, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Amelia Gray, Mark Eydelshteyn, Gabbriette, The Dare and Peggy Gou – gathered to watch Vaccarello fast-forward to Saint Laurent in 1974 and Fire Island in the ’80s, drawing from the rich palettes of artists Patrick Angus, Billy Sullivan and Larry Stanton, who lost their lives to AIDS. “Why did he choose that inspiration?” Vogue’s Sarah Mower asked. “‘Because I’m gay’,” Vaccarello replied. But also, he added, “because they lived an intense and fun time, not knowing what was going to happen. I related that to what is happening today in general. Maybe we should be thinking more. To be sure not to miss your life”.