Sunday, March 22

Marisa Abela Wears High-Street Staple to 2025 Fashion Awards


Time to blast Lily Allen’s “West End Girl” as every stylish Londoner has descended in South Kensington this evening for the annual Fashion Awards. Hosted at the palatial Royal Albert Hall, the yearly festivity celebrates the best and brightest in British style, including nascent names like talent incubator and collective Fashion East and notable stalwarts like Simone Rocha and Sarah Burton.

And whilst the red carpet is always an opportunity to showcase the craftsmanship and creative imaginations of the industry’s finest, it’s also a moment to prove that simplicity and accessibility will always reap dividends, at least that is what it seems at the 2025 edition.

Indeed, Industry star Marisa Abela arrived on the pink carpet this evening wearing quite a pared-back ensemble compared to her fellow attendees in the form of a crisp white shirt, drop-diamond choker, textured fur trousers and cream pumps. Her devotion to wearing winter whites—especially as the actress is a newlywed after all—amid the freezing temperatures is commendable in its own right, but it was really her eschewing the lavish looks that these events often demand that really piqued my interest

An image of Marisa Abela wearing a white shirt to the 2025 Fashion Awards.

(Image credit: Getty Images)

In fact, her white shirt could easily be something her on-screen character, Yasmin Kara-Hanani, wears to the Pierpoint offices, showcasing that the best red carpet looks are usually the most effortless.

This is a detail levelled time and time again in Hollywood, with Abela joining an array of film starlets and fashion it-girls who’ve opted for this wardrobe staple for high-profile moments.

An image of Zendaya wearing a cropped white shirt from Valentino to the 2022 Oscars.

(Image credit: Getty Images)

At the 2022 Academy Awards, Zendaya referenced a look by Sharon Stone to the 1998 Oscars by replicating the star’s satin lavender Vera Wang skirt with her own Valentino iteration. (Talk about a basic instinct.)

An image of Sharon Stone wearing a white shirt at the 1998 Oscars.

(Image credit: Getty Images)

A few years earlier, in 1995, Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy wore a tuxedo-style shirt and mermaid cut black pencil skirt by Yohji Yamamoto to a gala held at the Whitney Museum of American Art, starting this canon of stylish and aspirational ensembles.