Every Look We Love from Dakota Johnson’s Materialists Closet
We can debate whether Lucy Materialists' leader, played by Dakota Johnson made the right man choice (Pedro Pascal or Chris Evans, a choice impossible to make), but there is absolutely no doubt about one thing: she made the right outfits. Always.
Dakota Johnson’s Materialists closet isn't shouty. It doesn't cry out for attention. Rather, it presents itself incrementally a subtle form of refusal to follow rules that is lived-in, intimate, and magnetically effortless. It's the sort of style you don't immediately notice but once you do, you can't help remembering.
Soft Power Dressing
Even in a strapless cobalt dress or power boots with a blazer, Lucy never seems to be trying to impress anyone but herself. She pairs elegance and edge, to a master lesson in dressing as if you're the boss *and* just broke someone's heart. Intentional,
Romantic Fashion with a Real-World Edge
Florals, ruffles, and billowy silhouettes are balanced with scuffed-up sneakers or cinched by a huge sweater. Her look is 90s romance revamped ethereal, sure, but always about to take a walk of shame. It's femininity rebooted for the boss lady.
Downtown Chic Without the Try-Hard
Lucy's NYC wardrobe is real, not staged for the Instagram. Baggy jeans, a white button-down, and thrift boots are her effortless cool. It's the creative director off-work chic, rough around the edges, but deliberate.
Not Trend-Driven
Her appearance never strikes one as pursuing something. She gets dressed for the day, for herself, for her disposition. Everything feels intimate: an edited wardrobe and not a devoured one. From vintage sneakers to architectural evening dresses, one can tell that Lucy's fashion choices are a question of resonance and not relevance.
The Materialist Aesthetic
It's not about acquisition, it's about intent. Dakota Johnson's Materialist closet is lined with stories, not logos. Everything looks worn in, loved, and chosen. She dresses not to be seen, but to be in sympathy with mood, city, moment. In “Materialists”, Lucy reminds us also that the best style isn't always about what one wears, it's attitude. She might be unsure about love, but about style, she is always sure.