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Zendaya refuses to wear these 5 fashion labels — and this is the shocking reason why

fashion soulmate” early in her career — and he kept “all the receipts.”On an episode of the fashion podcast “The Cutting Room Floor,” Roach, 45, recalled how Chanel, Dior, Gucci, Valentino and Saint Laurent would “all say no” to Zendaya, 27, telling him to “try again next year” and calling her “too green,” per The Hollywood Reporter.“When I said, ‘If you say no, it’ll be a no forever,’ that rang true for a long, long time,” said Roach, who has been styling the “Dune” actress since she was just 14 years old.“By the time she had got to American Vogue, she still had never wore any of those designers — she still hasn’t,” he added, clarifying that in editorial, she has occasionally worn one of the sworn-off labels.“She still has never worn Dior on a carpet. She still has never worn Chanel on a carpet.
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How to preserve cherished clothing to pass down to your kids like these A-list moms
a little vintage?For her 21st birthday, Carys Zeta Douglas, the daughter of Catherine Zeta-Jones, picked her mom’s pink, silk and lace slip first worn on the 1999 MTV Movie Awards red carpet. Meanwhile, Busy Philipps lent her daughter, Birdie Silverstein, the velvet Betsy Johnson frock from the premiere of “The Green Mile,” which the teen wore at an Olivia Rodrigo concert.And last year, Gwyneth Paltrow shared a snap of her daughter, Apple, sporting her black Alexander McQueen gown worn at the 2002 Academy Awards, while Salma Hayek let her daughter, Valentina Paloma Pinault, borrow her fiery red Isaac Mizrahi gown to attend the Oscars.Brooke Shields has also handed down many of her archival pieces from red carpets of yore, as has Angelina Jolie, whose daughters Shiloh and Zahara have borrowed dresses from their famous mother’s closet.As someone who is also the lucky recipient of many ’90s staples from my mom’s walk-in, there is a priceless sentimentality that accompanies each garment that you can’t buy at the department store — and, arguably, it’s better than any designer item.“If you are saving things for your children, save them because they have sentimental meaning to you or because you find the design exceptional,” fashion historian Ruby Redstone told The Telegraph.But clothing storage is much more complex than just hanging the pieces in your closet.
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