Street‑style signals: Bieber, Zendaya, Rysheva

Street style is sending a clear, wearable message right now: Hailey Bieber’s sporty‑chic formula—biker shorts with oversized jackets, sneakers and statement sunglasses—keeps getting traction on social feeds, while Zendaya is nudging casual glam with oversized blazers, tailored shorts and neutral palettes. ( ). At the fringes, Marina Rysheva’s high‑low grunge‑minimalist pairing of elongated sweaters, dark jeans and oversized bombers is trending, suggesting that the street mix of soft tailoring and utility is a motif to borrow this spring (x.com).

Street style often looks chaotic up close: one person in gym clothes, another in a blazer, someone else in a bomber jacket big enough to swallow a chair. But when the same shape keeps surfacing on phones and sidewalks, it stops looking random. Right now the signal is a simple one. Take something tailored, soften it. Take something athletic or utilitarian, polish it. Then wear it as if you did not think very hard about it. The three names attached to that formula are Hailey Bieber, Zendaya, and, at the moodier edge of the spectrum, Marina Rysheva. (whowhatwear.com) (wwd.com 1) (wwd.com 2) Bieber’s version is the easiest to spot because it has been stable for years and still reads as current. Fashion editors now describe her off-duty wardrobe as a system built from oversized outerwear, fitted basics, sneakers, slick accessories, and neutral or monochrome palettes. It is “model off duty” stripped down to parts you can actually identify at a crosswalk: biker or micro shorts, a boxy leather jacket or blazer, crew socks, running shoes, sharp sunglasses. That mix keeps circulating because it solves a practical problem. The shorts keep the outfit light. The jacket makes it feel finished. The sunglasses do the rest. (whowhatwear.com) (harpersbazaar.com.au) (editorialist.com) Zendaya’s take lands a little farther toward tailoring. In a March 16, 2026 appearance in Los Angeles, she stepped out in a light gray structured blazer with matching knee-length shorts and a white shirt, a look that turned suiting into warm-weather streetwear without losing its crispness. The proportions matter here. An oversized or structured jacket gives authority. Bare legs and shorts remove the stiffness. Neutrals keep the whole thing from tipping into costume. (justjared.com) That is also why these outfits feel bigger than celebrity copying. The spring 2026 runways have been pushing the same ingredients from the other direction. WWD’s trend reports from Milan highlighted sporty layers, utility outerwear, bold tailoring, short shorts, and grounded neutrals, while a separate roundup of spring 2026 tailoring emphasized oversized and boxy blazers, roomy suits, and softer fabrics. In other words, the street and the runway are meeting in the same place: structure on top, ease underneath. (wwd.com 1) (wwd.com 2) (wwd.com 3) Rysheva’s role in this trio is to darken the palette and rough up the finish. The card’s description of her look—elongated sweaters, dark jeans, oversized bombers—fits the same silhouette logic as Bieber and Zendaya, but with less polish and more grunge-minimal tension. The clothes still rely on contrast: long knit against narrow denim, heavy bomber against a lean base layer. The difference is mood. Bieber looks sporty and expensive. Zendaya looks tailored and controlled. Rysheva looks like she got dressed for a cold morning and accidentally made it chic. That is why this cluster of looks keeps spreading. It is not one trend but one equation. Start with a small, simple base. Add one oversized piece with shape. Keep the colors quiet. Finish with something useful—a sneaker, a bomber, a pair of dark sunglasses. On screen, it reads instantly. On a real sidewalk, it still works.

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