West Side Story, wore custom Christian Dior—though the dress is sheer on its own, Zegler was styled by Sarah Slutsky (according to CheckTheTag) to make the dress look more opaque.
The sheer trend, paradoxically, can be made modest(ish.) Zegler plays Maria in the reboot of the classic musical, and her princess-y, mostly opaque gown stays more or less in tune with her ingenue brand.
These are by no means the last sheer gowns we'll see on Grammy night. The so-called “naked” dresses push boundaries and play with questions about what is “appropriate.” Celebrities, particularly celebrity women are called on every day to show off their bodies, they make money from their bodies, their bodies receive constant criticism and feedback.
Sheer dresses dare to ask: Is there any limit to how much people want to see? They challenge the dated ideas, grounded in misogyny, that women have to walk a fine line between revealing their bodies and concealing them. “Here I am,” women in sheer dresses seem to say. “I dare you to call me trashy.” Or maybe the sheer dress trend is not a commentary at all.
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