Rockefeller Plaza hasn’t witnessed this much unfiltered star power since the Christmas Tree lighting. Miley Cyrus, riding high on the UK chart domination of her latest album Something Beautiful, turned a routine promotional stop at Rough Trade NYC into a masterclass in avant-garde audacity—wearing a black transparent Ludovic de Saint Sernin “Carrie” dress that left little to the imagination and everything to desire.
The Look: Provocation as Poetry
From the designer’s “BDSM Ballet” collection, the dress was less fabric, more feeling:
- Sheer black mesh that flirted with exposure while maintaining an air of mystery
- Strategic cutouts tracing the contours of her tattooed frame like a living sketch
- Bustier-inspired structure blending dominatrix edge with balletcore delicacy
The genius? Miley made Victorian scandal look like modern artistry—her toned physique and bad-girl smirk transforming what could’ve been shocking into high fashion.
Why This Matters: The Miley Method
While other pop stars play it safe in cookie-cutter glam, Cyrus reminds us why she’s music’s reigning shapeshifter:
🔥 She treats skin as just another texture (no blush-worthy apologies here)
🔥 Her tattoos become part of the design (inked biceps peeking through sheer fabric = organic embellishment)
🔥 Confidence is her real accessory (that “try me” posture said more than any press release)
Fans and critics alike noted how the look embodied her album’s ethos—raw, unfiltered, and unapologetically free.
The Bigger Picture: Sheer Daring as Self-Love
In an industry that still polices women’s bodies, Miley’s fashion rebellion matters because:
- It rejects the male gaze (this wasn’t for anyone—it was because she wanted to)
- It redefines “appropriate” (since when did rockstars dress for boardrooms?)
- It proves skin isn’t scandalous (it’s just another canvas)
As she signed autographs for screaming fans—completely unfazed by gasps or camera flashes—one thing was clear: Miley Cyrus wears her truth as boldly as she wears Ludovic de Saint Sernin.
🎤 Swipe to see how sheer dressing is done without a single regret.
💬 Could YOU rock this look? Sound off below!