How Harry Styles Became the Most Watched Man in Fashion: His Style Evolution
Before he was the first man to appear solo on the cover of American Vogue, Harry Edward Styles was a teenager working the register at the W Mandeville Bakery in Holmes Chapel, Cheshire—a village so small that when fans started showing up by the thousands a decade later, the local council had to hire tour guides to manage them. Born Feb. 1, 1994, in Redditch, Worcestershire, Styles grew up singing lead in a school band called White Eskimo. At 16, his mother signed him up for The X Factor without telling him.
The audition—Stevie Wonder’s “Isn’t She Lovely,” April 2010—didn’t go as planned. Styles failed as a solo act but was grouped with four other eliminated contestants to form One Direction, a name he suggested. They finished third, then sold 70 million records, became the first group in Billboard 200 history to have their first four albums debut at No. 1 and turned Styles into the most scrutinized face in pop music before he could legally drink.
When the band went on hiatus in 2016, he didn’t retreat. His self-titled debut hit No. 1 in both the U.S. and the U.K. in 2017. His sophomore album, Fine Line (2019), broke the record for the biggest first-week sales by an English male artist on the Billboard 200. Harry’s House (2022) won Album of the Year at the Grammys, winning over Beyoncé, Adele and Bad Bunny. Love on Tour became the fifth-highest-grossing concert tour in history. Along the way, styled by longtime collaborator Harry Lambert, he co-chaired the Met Gala in a sheer Gucci jumpsuit and a single pearl earring, put a periwinkle Gucci dress on the cover of Vogue, launched a global crochet craze with a JW Anderson cardigan and made the pearl a menswear staple. His fourth album, Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally, arrives March 6, followed by a 30-night residency at Madison Square Garden beginning in August—his only U.S. stop and twice the length of the 2022 run that earned him a permanent banner in the arena’s rafters.
Harry Styles’ Fashion Evolution
- One Direction Portrait Session
- The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader Premiere
- The X Factor
- Stella McCartney AW12 Presentation
- Brit Awards
- British Fashion Awards
- Street Style
- American Music Awards
- Billboard Music Awards
- Lou Lou’s Club
- BBC Radio 2 Studios
- Dunkirk World Premiere
- 31st ARIA Awards
- Harry Styles: Live on Tour
- Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony
- Met Gala
- Capital’s Jingle Bell Ball
- BBC Radio 2
- 63rd Grammy Awards
- Brit Awards
- Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival
- Don’t Worry Darling Photocall
- Don’t Worry Darling Red Carpet
- My Policeman Premiere
- BBC Radio 1’s Big Weekend
- Brit Awards
- 65th Grammy Awards
- 65th Grammy Awards (Performance)
- S.S. Daley RTW Spring 2025
- Valentino Pavillon des Folies
- Street Style
- 68th Grammy Awards
- Brit Awards
One Direction Portrait Session
- London, 2010
Sixteen years old and two months out of his X Factor audition, Styles sat for an early band portrait in a white OnePiece onesie and rubber jelly bracelets. There was no stylist and no strategy—just ungovernable curls and a teenager from Holmes Chapel who had been singing Stevie Wonder for strangers six weeks earlier.
The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader Premiere
- Odeon Leicester Square, London, 2010
One Direction’s first red carpet arrived before their first single, and Styles turned up in a charcoal suit, white shirt and graphic-print tie indistinguishable from the four matching outfits flanking him—boxy fit, trousers too long, the whole thing likely pulled from a rack that afternoon. But even in a uniform, the posture gave him away: he already understood the room was watching him, not the film.
The X Factor
- Fountain Studios, London, 2011
A year into the machine and the instincts were sharpening: Styles left Fountain Studios after an eviction-night taping in a teal velvet blazer over a white tee, plum skinny jeans and a poppy pinned to his lapel, friendship bracelets still climbing his wrist. While his bandmates defaulted to hoodies and denim, the 17-year-old was already gravitating toward texture and tailoring, wearing velvet before he had any reason to and making it look less like a costume than a preference.
Stella McCartney AW12 Presentation
- One Mayfair, London, 2012
Styles showed up to his first fashion show in a pale blue suit, white shirt, tan brogues and no tie. He was sitting front row at Stella McCartney during London Fashion Week at 18, without a stylist or an invitation anyone expected him to have.
Brit Awards
- The O2, London, 2012
One Direction arrived at the Brits in coordinated grey suiting, but Styles was the one who added the waistcoat, the black bow tie and the pocket square folded into a peak—a three-piece among open collars and trainers, studying a syllabus his bandmates hadn’t enrolled in.
British Fashion Awards
- The London Coliseum, 2013
At 19, the youngest British Style Award recipient in the ceremony’s history collected his trophy in head-to-toe black—slim suit jacket, sheer shirt, polka-dot skinny scarf and suede boots—the whole thing pitched between Hedi Slimane’s Saint Laurent and Stones-era Keith Richards. He was still technically in a boy band, but the fashion industry had already decided he wasn’t.
Street Style
- Miami Beach, 2013
Off duty in Miami, Styles wore a vintage Conway Twitty and Loretta Lynn tour raglan with black skinny jeans, brown leather boots, a cross pendant and Wayfarers—the uniform of a 19-year-old mining classic rock wardrobes with doctoral focus while his bandmates reached for streetwear and snapbacks.
American Music Awards
- Nokia Theatre, Los Angeles, 2014
The Jagger phase was fully operational: Styles accepted an AMA in a black Saint Laurent suit, black shirt unbuttoned to a bandana-print skinny scarf, cross pendant and a wide-brimmed fedora tipped back on hair that had grown past his ears for the first time. He was 20, still collecting awards with One Direction and already dressing like someone who had memorized every frame of the Rolling Stones’ 1972 tour and filed it as a styling brief.
Billboard Music Awards
- MGM Grand, Las Vegas, 2015
One Direction’s last major awards carpet as a quartet—Zayn had left two months earlier—and Styles showed up in a black satin shirt unbuttoned deep, layered necklaces and hair past his shoulders, already gone from the building in spirit if not in contract.
Lou Lou’s Club
- London, 2015
Styles stepped out during London Fashion Week in a gold-and-black diamond jacquard Gucci suit with a black shirt, Chelsea boots and silver rings on every other finger, his hair nearly at his collarbone. It was his big style pivot—Harry Lambert had entered the picture the year prior, the Saint Laurent cosplay was giving way to something louder and more playful, and the boy who once wore Jack Wills T-shirts was now wearing runway prints to members’ clubs on a Monday
BBC Radio 2 Studios
- London, 2017
Two looks in one day announced the solo era. First came a cream satin bomber jacket, newsboy cap, skinny jeans and suede Chelsea boots, then hours later a red-and-white plaid Vivienne Westwood suit with a grandad-collar shirt, cross pendant and black Gucci Horsebit boots, confirming he could do restrained and unhinged on the same afternoon and intended to make a habit of both.
Dunkirk World Premiere
- Odeon Leicester Square, London, 2017
The hair was short—cut for Christopher Nolan’s camera—and the suit was the subtlest thing he’d worn in years: dark navy-green double-breasted Gucci, white shirt open at the collar and burgundy leather shoes. A deliberate reset at 23, making the case that he could stand on a carpet beside Cillian Murphy and Kenneth Branagh and look like he belonged to their industry, not just his own.
31st ARIA Awards
- The Star, Sydney, 2017
A purple-and-gold paisley double-breasted Gucci suit, white shirt open at the collar, painted nails and a stack of silver rings—the first truly extravagant red-carpet suit of the solo career. The jacquard shimmered under every flash, announcing not just a new album cycle but a new relationship with pattern, proportion and the idea that menswear could function as a fashion spectacle.
Harry Styles: Live on Tour
- Madison Square Garden, New York, 2018
His first headlining MSG show, and the cream floral-print Gucci suit with a contrasting black yoke—wide-legged, high-waisted and loaded with chunky rings—moved as hard as he did, every flared trouser leg and billowing panel engineered by his stylist to catch the light when he dropped to his knees or sprinted across the stage. It was the first real proof that the stage wardrobe wasn’t just costuming, but part of the choreography.
Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony
- Barclays Center, New York, 2019
An electric blue velvet Gucci suit—double-breasted, gold buttons and flared trousers pooling over his boots—for the night he inducted Stevie Nicks and called her everything you’d ever want in a lady, a muse and a friend. The suit was a tribute in fabric: the velvet, the flare, the unapologetic maximalism all borrowed from the Nicks-era vocabulary he was honoring, worn by a 25-year-old dressing for the lineage.
Met Gala
- Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 2019
The look that redrew the line. Co-chairing alongside Alessandro Michele, Anna Wintour, Lady Gaga and Serena Williams, he walked the pink carpet in a custom Gucci jumpsuit—sheer black lace blouse with billowing sleeves and a pussy-bow collar over high-waisted trousers, patent heeled boots, a single pearl drop earring and a mismatched manicure, tattoos showing through the mesh like annotations on a thesis about gender, camp and who gets to wear what. The pearl alone launched a menswear trend that outlasted the decade.
Capital’s Jingle Bell Ball
- The O2, London, 2019
Performing in a dark indigo glitter-flecked denim suit, looking like someone had dipped a 1970s trucker jacket in stardust and dared him to take it onstage at a pop radio concert. Styles’ Fine Line era was in full swing.
BBC Radio 2
- London 2020
Valentine’s Day, and he left the studio in a green Bode cropped jacket with whipstitch trim and a cactus appliqué, a brown-and-white striped tee, camel corduroy trousers, red nail polish and a pearl necklace—the first major outing for what would become his signature accessory.
63rd Grammy Awards
- Los Angeles Convention Center, 2021
He opened the ceremony shirtless in a custom leather Gucci suit and a green feather boa, then changed into this for the carpet: a yellow-and-brown plaid Gucci blazer over a bare chest, chocolate-brown velvet flares, cream platforms and a lavender boa draped like a stole. Best Pop Solo Performance for “Watermelon Sugar”—his first Grammy—collected looking like he’d shoplifted Elton John’s wardrobe in 1974 and dared anyone to ask for it back.
Brit Awards
- The O2, London, 2021
The British Single award for “Watermelon Sugar,” accepted in a Gucci color-blocked suit with a brown leather Gucci Bamboo handbag carried by the handle like a packed lunch. In a room full of men in black tie, he walked the carpet holding a purse and wearing a suit that looked like a 1970s living room, and made both decisions seem so obvious that the only question was why nobody else had thought of it.
Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival
- Indio, California, 2022
Opening night, main stage energy and that custom Gucci sequin jumpsuit—the one that was sleeveless with a plunging neckline and rainbow-iridescent paillettes. It moved like chain mail with every lunge across the stage, tattoos on full display. Though he brought out Shania Twain and Lizzo, the jumpsuit upstaged them both.
Don’t Worry Darling Photocall
- 79th Venice International Film Festival, 2022
A cream pinstripe Gucci double-breasted blazer over a white tee, dark navy wide-leg trousers, a sky-blue neckerchief and cognac leather shoes, Lambert dialing the volume to a conversational hum for a press line where the tabloid chaos surrounding the film would do the screaming. The neckerchief did the work of a tie without any of the formality, a small act of Italian insouciance on an Italian stage.
Don’t Worry Darling Red Carpet
- 79th Venice International Film Festival, 2022
Hours later, a different suit for the evening premiere: navy Gucci double-breasted with an oversized light blue Peter Pan collar spilling over the lapels, matching wide-leg trousers, white Chelsea boots and dark sunglasses held in both hands. The collar—borrowed from a 1960s schoolgirl’s uniform, grafted onto sharp Italian tailoring—read as either childish or genius, depending entirely on the confidence of the wearer. Meanwhile, every camera was hunting for evidence of behind-the-scenes drama.
My Policeman Premiere
- Toronto International Film Festival, 2022
Six days after Venice and time to promote a different film, a fresh palette emerged in a forest green Gucci double-breasted blazer over sage green wide-leg trousers with cream leather boots. The look was accessorized with a dark green floral brooch and a matching green Gucci Bamboo handbag, the tonal layering working like a painter building depth from a single pigment at different saturations.
BBC Radio 1’s Big Weekend
- Coventry, 2022
A black-and-purple sequined jumpsuit with wide-set straps baring his tattooed chest, custom Gucci, flared legs moving like liquid under the stadium lights. Love on Tour had become a nightly fashion show by this point, Lambert cycling through dozens of custom looks, and this one distilled the formula to its essence with sequins, skin and a silhouette borrowed equally from ’70s glam and ’80s disco.
Brit Awards
- The O2, London, 2023
After years of rainbow sequins and lavender boas and handbags in every shade of green, his stylist stripped the palette to a single note. This one hit: a custom Nina Ricci black velvet tuxedo jacket with exaggerated peplum waist and satin peak lapels, worn open over bare chest, a massive black organza flower erupting from the right shoulder, wide-leg trousers pooling over black boots.
65th Grammy Awards
- Los Angeles, 2023
Album of the Year for Harry’s House, collected in a custom EgonLab x Swarovski rainbow harlequin jumpsuit—every diamond-shaped panel encrusted in a different color of crystal—with white leather boots and tattoos filling in the neckline where a shirt would have been. Lambert shifted the spotlight from Gucci to an emerging French house, and the crystals caught every stage light in the building.
65th Grammy Awards (Performance)
- Los Angeles, 2023
Later that same night, he took the stage in a floor-length silver Gucci fringe tunic over matching sequin trousers and black-and-white sneakers, the metallic strands swaying with every step like a curtain of liquid mercury someone had forgotten to hang.
S.S. Daley RTW Spring 2025
- London Fashion Week, 2024
Front row at Steven Stokey-Daley’s show in a navy cotton chore jacket over a white tee, matching wide-leg trousers, black-and-white Vans and a white floral brooch at the chest pocket—surrounded by dahlias and hydrangeas that made the whole scene look like a greenhouse with a runway through it.
Valentino Pavillon des Folies
- Paris Fashion Week, 2024
Front row for Alessandro Michele’s debut at Valentino—the designer who had dressed him in sheer jumpsuits and pearl earrings during the Gucci years—wearing something almost conspicuously simple: a tangerine crewneck over a pale blue collared shirt, dark trousers, hair cropped short, mustache new. He looked less like a pop star than a well-dressed philosophy professor in Paris for the weekend.
Street Style
- Rome, 2025
Nearly two years into a public hiatus, and the paparazzi caught him on a Roman side street in a beige The Row trench coat over straight-leg jeans, black knit beanie, aviators and a worn brown suede duffle bag. It was the most anonymous he had looked since Holmes Chapel, and yet the trench was perfectly proportioned, the loafers immaculate, and the bag had the patina of something expensive loved into softness.
68th Grammy Awards
- Crypto.com Arena, Los Angeles, 2026
Presenting onstage in a custom Dior cropped blazer—Jonathan Anderson’s riff on the house’s landmark Bar jacket, grey wool-and-silk with a subtle sparkle, black shawl lapels—worn over bare chest with dark wash straight-leg jeans and mint green Dior ballet flats from the Spring 2026 collection. Anderson, who took over as Dior’s creative director in 2025, had been in Styles’s orbit for years through JW Anderson; the cardigan that launched a global crochet craze in 2020 was his, and now he was dressing the same man from the top of a French couture house.
Brit Awards
- Co-op Live, Manchester, 2026
The comeback carpet, six days before the album drops: a black pinstripe Chanel double-breasted suit with exaggerated lapels, pale blue shirt, silver tie and black ballet flats over white socks—the house switched from Gucci. Then he stripped the jacket for the performance and tore across the stage in just the pinstripe trousers, white shirt rolled to the elbows and a diagonal-striped tie loosened at the collar.