Kaia Gerber Recreates One of Cindy Crawford’s Most Iconic Looks at TIFF
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It’s a daughter’s rite of passage—her duty, even—to borrow from her mother’s closet, but Kaia Gerber and Cindy Crawford are taking that mother-daughter bond to the next level. At the premiere of Shell at the 2024 Toronto International Film Festival, Gerber paid homage to Crawford with her red carpet look.
The model and budding actor looked the spitting image of her supermodel mother in a white Hervé Léger body-con maxi dress with a sweetheart neckline and underwire cups—a recreation of Crawford’s 1993 Oscars dress, custom-made for the occasion. “Kaia had sent me a mood board for TIFF and this was one of her references,” Molly Dickson, Gerber’s stylist, tells Vogue. “I thought it would be amazing to pay tribute to Cindy’s iconic moment.”
Like her mom, Gerber accessorized with a pair of white pointy-toe pumps. But the connection to Crawford didn’t end with the dress. Gerber also dug into her mother’s impressive jewelry archive, settling on vintage diamond jewelry and a vintage Omega watch from Crawford’s personal collection for TIFF.
While Dickson dressed Gerber in a black archival Donna Karan halter dress for the premiere of her film Saturday Night, she knew that Shell (which co-stars Elisabeth Moss and Kate Hudson) called for a wow factor. Luckily, when set free in Cindy Crawford’s closet, Kaia Gerber had a wealth of references to pull from.
This article was originally published on Vogue.com.
Hannah Jackson
Hannah Jackson is a fashion writer at Vogue. Prior to working full-time with the publication, she previously did freelance writing and was a social media manager at TheLi.st. Her work has been published in ELLE, Architectural Digest, The Cut/New York Magazine, Rolling Stone, W Magazine, Cosmopolitan, NYLON, InStyle, Bustle, and more. She holds a Bachelor of Arts degree from UC Santa Barbara where she studied political science. She also has a Master of Science degree from Northwestern University where she studied journalism along with a specialization in magazines.