
Gen Z in Body, Millennium in Soul: Tyla’s Sartorial Time Travel Continues in Rome
There is something deliciously paradoxical about Tyla. Born in 2002, the South African singer technically belongs to Generation Z — and yet, season after season, her wardrobe reads as a love letter to a decade she was barely old enough to remember. Nowhere was this more exquisitely apparent than at Valentino’s fall 2026 show in Rome, where creative director Alessandro Michele — who made the bold decision to bypass Milan entirely and return the house to its spiritual home — presented a collection that felt equally steeped in nostalgia and reinvention. Tyla, seated front row, dressed the part to perfection.

After commanding the attention of Paris Fashion Week with a string of impeccably choreographed front-row appearances, the “Water” singer touched down in the Eternal City dressed in a look that could be best described as equal parts boardroom gravitas and late-night bottle service. A dusty rose camisole — delicately edged in sheerness and adorned with embroidery along the bust — was paired with a micro-mini skirt cut from a wool suiting fabric. The pinstripe pattern of the skirt, visible only as the faintest sliver beneath her billowing blouse, lent the ensemble a studied tension: prim and provocative all at once. Meanwhile, a second look completed her arrival — a pale pink lace lingerie-style blouse, its cut-out detailing leaving little to the imagination, re-emphasizing Tyla’s commitment to the kind of dressed-up undress that defined early-aughts red carpets.

But the true protagonist of Tyla’s outfit — the piece that will be dissected, coveted, and screenshot-saved by fashion devotees — were her nude Valentino Rockstud heels. The iconic pump, once the definitive status symbol of the Obama-era It girl, is experiencing nothing short of a full cultural rehabilitation. Michele has quietly been reissuing iterations of the style, and the fashion world has taken notice: Lily Allen has been spotted in them; Dakota Johnson wore a pair on a recent outing; and — most thrillingly — a pair appeared on Meryl Streep’s imperious Miranda Priestly in the recently released trailer for The Devil Wears Prada 2, cementing the shoe’s re-entry into the cultural conversation with the kind of endorsement that money simply cannot buy.

For Tyla, of course, this was hardly a first encounter with the style. In January, she attended a Valentino after-party following the house’s spring 2026 couture presentation in a pair of blush Rockstuds, styled — magnificently, recklessly — with skin-tight denim capris worn unbuttoned at the waist, a cropped fur coat, and a hot pink newsboy cap. Earlier that same evening, she had appeared at the show itself in a one-shoulder embroidered mini dress paired with polka-dotted Rockstuds. The message, delivered with the confidence of someone who has studied the archives but answers to no one, is unmistakable: the Rockstud is no longer a relic. It is, once again, the definitive accessory of a woman who knows exactly what she is doing.

