Celebrity Style

Why the Zoot Suit Ruled the 2025 Met Gala

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While its distinctive style was actually adopted from the London “drape” suit in the 1930s—a design popularized by the Duke of Windsor, Edward VIII—the power-dressing shape developed deep roots on the streets of Harlem. As the zoot suit began to become popular in the 1940s, it also took on sociopolitical significance: During the 1943 Zoot Suit Riots in LA, for one, law enforcement officers began terrorizing Mexican American neighborhoods in search of “zoot-suiters,” whom they associated with rising crime rates. (One Los Angeles newspaper even printed a guide on how to “de-zoot” someone. )

Today, then, a reclamation of the zoot suit serves as a form of cultural pride, and “a freedom over the body,” as Jillian Hernandez, author of Aesthetics of Excess: The Art and Politics of Black and Latina Embodiment, told the LA Times. “If you think about braceros or the descendants of enslaved African Americans…they were seen as workers. When you wear this garment, it’s saying, I’m valuable—I’m more than a worker.”

There were zoot suits aplenty on the Met Gala red carpet last night. Dapper Dan—a true contemporary dandy—wore a black and white suit emblazoned with the Sankofa symbol, a mythical Ghanaian bird. In Louis Vuitton, Zendaya also paid homage to the zoot suit with her white three-piece style, designed by Pharrell Williams. Maluma also wore a vibrant Willy Chavarria number that paid tribute to Pachucos and their zoot suits. The thoughtful designs ruled the night—and were an intentional, tailored way to respect the exhibition s theme.

Below, more of the best zoot suits from the 2025 Met Gala.