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Marie Claire
Marie Claire
Lifestyle
Mischa Anouk Smith

Rihanna’s Style Evolution: From Island Girl to Fashion Vanguard

Rihanna’s Style Evolution.

Rihanna knows how to turn an everyday occasion into a moment. Okay, perhaps announcing the birth of your baby girl isn’t exactly a daily occurrence, but it’s a fairly standard practice. Except, of course, when Rihanna is involved.

In the announcement photo, Rihanna cradles newborn Rocki Irish Mayers, both mother and daughter are draped in swathes of sweet pink. Oversized ballet slipper-pink bows trace Rihanna’s upper arms, matching the onesie and frilly lace socks worn by her daughter. The accessories, too, are symbolic: a rose-gold Audemars Piguet watch (with a cool $100,000 price tag on the resale market) with a pink dial, and a custom yellow-gold “Mom” ring.

The look doesn’t even comprise any actual clothes, and yet, as soon as it was uploaded to Instagram, it became a fashion moment (there are over 200,000 comments alone at the time of writing). This is the power of Rihanna.

Asap Rocky and Rihanna at the Gucci show during Milan Fashion Week Fall/Winter 2022/23 on February 25, 2022 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Victor Boyko/Getty Images for Gucci) (Image credit: Victor Boyko/Getty Images for Gucci)

Few women have reshaped the visual language of celebrity quite like her. Since she first stepped onto the world stage in 2005, the Barbadian singer, entrepreneur, and mogul has transformed herself from a beachy pop ingénue into one of the most fearless and genre-defying fashion figures of her generation. What she wears is never just clothing: it’s commentary, power, rebellion, and, as this most recent announcement shows, history.

From the low-slung jeans and baby tees of her early music videos to her Vatican-inspired Met Gala grandeur (and that majestic—and meme-ified—Guo Pei gown), Rihanna has always been more about creating trends than wearing them. In doing so, she has come to embody the ways in which fashion can be wielded as both self-expression and cultural disruption.

Here, we chart her stratospheric style evolution.

Rihanna from 2005–2008

Rihanna in 2005 at the Teen People Listening Lounge hosted by Jay-Z (Image credit: Kevin Winter via Getty Images)
Rihanna in 2006 performing at the half-time show of the 2006 Brut Sun Bowl contest (Image credit: Steve Grayson/WireImage via Getty Images)
Rihanna in 2007 performing at Z100's Zootopia (Image credit: Theo Wargo/WireImage for Clear Channel Entertainment Television) via Getty Images)
Rihanna in 2008 at the 50th annual Grammy awards, posing with her award for the Best Rap/Song Collaboration for "Umbrella" featuring Jay-Z (Image credit: Vince Bucci via Getty Images)

When Rihanna emerged with her debut single Pon de Replay, she was fresh-faced, sun-kissed, and still very much tied to the island-girl aesthetic of her Barbadian roots. Her early style leaned heavily on Y2K staples: low-rise denim, halternecks, and belly chains. As is typical of emerging artists, her style in these years was less about control and more about discovery, a girl adapting quickly to the aesthetics of American pop stardom, while bringing with her a distinct Caribbean cadence.

But even then, Rihanna wasn’t just another pop protégé. There was a confidence in how she held herself that felt instinctive. Sure, the fashion world hadn’t fully turned its gaze toward her yet, but it was only a matter of time...

Rihanna from 2009–2013

Rihanna in 2009 backstage at the American Music Awards (Image credit: Chris Polk/AMA2009/Getty Images for DCP)
Rihanna in 2009 performing at the RDS (Image credit: ShowBizIreland.com via Getty Images)
Rihanna in 2010 performing at the MTV Europe Music Awards (Image credit: Kevin Mazur/WireImage via Getty Images)
Rihanna in 2011 on the red carpet at the "Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty" Costume Institute Gala at The Metropolitan Museum of Art (Image credit: Kevin Mazur/WireImage via Getty Images)
Rihannain 2011 performing onstage at FOX's "The X Factor" (Image credit: Ray Mickshaw/FOX via Getty Images)
A$AP Rocky and Rihanna performing at the 2012 MTV Video Music Awards, years before they became a couple. (Image credit: Jason LaVeris/FilmMagic via Getty Images)
Rihanna in 2012 performing during the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show (Image credit: Jamie McCarthy via Getty Images)
Rihanna in 2013 in Soho, New York City. (Image credit: Alo Ceballos/FilmMagic via Getty Images)

The release of Rated R in 2009 signalled a turning point, not just musically, but sartorially. Good girl gone bad. With a freshly shorn pixie cut, heavy eyeliner, and a wardrobe that flirted with androgyny, Rihanna started embracing fashion as a form of defiance. Leather jackets, combat boots, and deconstructed silhouettes—items that have long acted as shorthand for rebellion—became key tenets of her new aesthetic.

Where Rihanna might’ve dressed for approval only a few years earlier, she was now styling herself for provocation. This period dovetailed with a broader cultural shift; as pop and hip-hop began to blur genre lines, so too did Rihanna’s wardrobe. Her style tapped into the rising influence of streetwear while also slipping into couture, and although still early in her career, Rihanna’s fashion choices were now about asserting agency.

Rihanna from 2014–2017

Rihanna in 2014 at the CFDA fashion awards (Image credit: Larry Busacca via Getty Images)
Rihanna in 2014 at the iHeartRadio Music Awards (Image credit: Alberto Rodriguez/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images)
Rihanna in 2015 on the red carpet for the "China: Through The Looking Glass" Costume Institute Benefit Gala at the Metropolitan Museum of Art (Image credit: Dimitrios Kambouris via Getty Images)
Rihanna in 2015 in New York City. (Image credit: NCP/Star Max/GC Images via Getty Images)
Rihanna in 2016 in New York City. (Image credit: Raymond Hall/GC Images via Getty Images)
Rihanna in 2016 backstage during FENTY x PUMA by Rihanna at Hotel Salomon de Rothschild on September 28, 2016 in Paris, France. (Image credit: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images for Fenty x Puma)

By the mid-2010s, Rihanna had transcended the realm of “style icon” to become one of fashion’s most compelling muses. Designers vied to dress her; photographers queued to shoot her. In 2014, she attended the CFDA Awards wearing a now-iconic sheer Adam Selman gown dripping in over 200,000 crystals, a piece of fashion history that offered both homage to Josephine Baker and a fearless reclaiming of body politics.

Bold and directional, Rihanna, at this time, was experimenting with silhouettes that challenged traditional ideas of proportion and femininity. Oversized puffers from Vetements and sculptural coats from Comme des Garçons became part of her evolving fashion narrative. More than just a personal aesthetic evolution, Rihanna’s styling choices reflected fashion’s own awakening. Luxury fashion was finally beginning to acknowledge street culture and the power of celebrity influence. Today, Rihanna is recognised as being part of the engine driving that change.

Rihanna from 2017–2020

Rihanna in 2017 at the "Rei Kawakubo/Comme des Garcons: Art Of The In-Between" Costume Institute Gala at Metropolitan Museum of Art (Image credit: Jamie McCarthy/FilmMagic via Getty Images)
Rihanna in 2017 in New York City. (Image credit: Raymond Hall/GC Images via Getty Images)
Rihanna in 2018 attending the Fenty Beauty by Rihanna Anniversary Event in Sydney, Australia. (Image credit: Don Arnold/WireImage via Getty Images)
Rihanna in 2018 at the Heavenly Bodies: Fashion & The Catholic Imagination Costume Institute Gala at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. (Image credit: John Shearer/Getty Images for The Hollywood Reporter)
Rihanna in 2018 at the FentyXPUMA Drippin event at Coachella. (Image credit: John Sciulli/Getty Images for PUMA)
Rihanna in 2019 on the red carpet at The British Fashion Awards at the Royal Albert Hall. (Image credit: Karwai Tang/WireImage via Getty Images)
Rihanna in 2020 onstage during Rihanna's Savage X Fenty Show Vol. 2 presented by Amazon Prime Video at the Los Angeles Convention Center. (Image credit: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Savage X Fenty Show Vol. 2 Presented by Amazon Prime Video)
Rihanna in 2020 arriving at a restaurant in SoHo. (Image credit: Pierre Suu/GC Images via Getty Images)
Rihanna in 2020 attending the 51st NAACP Image Awards. (Image credit: Paras Griffin/Getty Images for BET)

As the founder of both Fenty Beauty and Savage X Fenty, Rihanna began using fashion to reframe who gets to be seen, and how. Her runway shows celebrated bodies that had long been excluded from the lingerie industry. By casting pregnant models, plus-size dancers, drag performers, and people with disabilities, she created an inclusive, high-glam spectacle that stood in stark contrast to the narrow, homogeneous world of competitors.

Off the runway, her personal style remained just as subversive and boundary-pushing. Blurring the lines between streetwear and couture, she would pair oversized Balenciaga puffer coats with stilettos and turn vintage Dior saddle bags into modern staples. Her chameleonic wardrobe serves as a representation of the multifaceted nature of women, and she refuses to be boxed into one aesthetic or subculture, instead flitting with playful ease between a full Rick Owens look one day and baggy jeans and Timberlands the next.

Rihanna from 2020–2025

A$AP Rocky and Rihanna in 2021 at The Met Gala Celebrating In America: A Lexicon Of Fashion at Metropolitan Museum of Art. (Image credit: Mike Coppola via Getty Images)
Rihanna in 2021 during Savage X Fenty Show Vol. 3 presented by Amazon Prime Video. (Image credit: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Rihanna's Savage X Fenty Show Vol. 3 Presented by Amazon Prime Video)
Rihanna in 2021 filming a music video in the Bronx. (Image credit: Raymond Hall/GC Images via Getty Images)
A$AP Rocky and Rihanna in 2021 filming a music video in the Bronx. (Image credit: Raymond Hall/GC Images via Getty Images)
A$AP Rocky and Rihanna in 2022 in Los Angeles, California. (Image credit: Rachpoot/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images via Getty Images)

Rihanna has only grown more audacious with time. Her maternity fashion alone has rewritten the rules: bare baby bumps in custom Jean Paul Gaultier, lace-up tops by Chrome Hearts, and sculptural Alaïa designs are an unapologetic celebration of pregnancy as power. She’s turned custom Loewe coats into viral moments and turned up to Paris Fashion Week in archival YSL, Maison Margiela, and custom Fendi, all while resisting the pressure to be palatable.

Rihanna in 2022 attending the Dior Womenswear Fall/Winter 2022/2023 show as part of Paris Fashion Week. (Image credit: Stephane Cardinale - Corbis/Corbis via Getty Images)
A$AP Rocky and Rihanna in 2022 celebrating Fenty Beauty & Fenty Skin. (Image credit: Rich Fury/Getty Images for Fenty Beauty & Fenty Skin)
A$AP Rocky and Rihanna in 2023 attending the Costume Institute Benefit celebrating "Karl Lagerfeld: A Line of Beauty" at Metropolitan Museum of Art on May. (Image credit: Taylor Hill via Getty Images)
Rihanna in 2023 in New York City. (Image credit: Gotham/GC Images via Getty Images)

As she entered motherhood, she didn’t shrink into modesty. Instead, she redefined maternity fashion on her own terms. She refused to treat pregnancy as something to be hidden, and in doing so, sparked a global conversation about visibility, womanhood, and power.

Her fashion choices today are an elegant blend of her past signatures: the glamour of her haute couture years, the edge of her Rated R rebellion, the island ease of her youth. Whether she’s swathed in custom Bottega or walking the streets in slouchy vintage denim, there’s an ease and a mastery to it all. She also looks like she’s having an awful lot of fun, which shouldn’t be a rarity, but is.

Rihanna in 2024 in Los Angeles. (Image credit: The Hollywood Curtain/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images via Getty Images)
Rihanna in 2024 attending the FENTY x PUMA Creeper Phatty Earth Tone Launch Party at Tobacco Dock in London. (Image credit: Neil Mockford/WireImage via Getty Images)
Rihanna in 2024 attenings the Christian Dior Haute Couture Spring/Summer 2024 show as part of Paris Fashion Week. (Image credit: Stephane Cardinale - Corbis/Corbis via Getty Images)
Rihanna and A$AP Rocky in 2024 attending The British Fashion Awards 2024 presented by Pandora at Royal Albert Hall in London. (Image credit: Max Cisotti/Dave Benett/Getty Images)

And yet, Rihanna’s style story isn’t just her own. It’s also a mirror of culture’s shifting face. She has brought Blackness, Caribbean heritage, body diversity, and queer aesthetics into the fashion mainstream—not as token gestures, but as core values. Her fashion isn’t just about beauty or trendsetting; it’s about building worlds where more people can see themselves reflected.

Rihanna in 2025 attending The Met Gala Celebrating "Superfine: Tailoring Black Style" at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. (Image credit: Udo Salters/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images)
Rihanna in 2025 in Los Angeles. (Image credit: DUTCH/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images via Getty Images)
A$AP Rocky and Rihanna in 2025 on the red carpet at the "Highest 2 Lowest" Premiere during The 78th Cannes Film Festival. (Image credit: Michael Buckner/Variety via Getty Images)
Rihanna in 2025 in Los Angeles. (Image credit: MEGA/GC Images via Getty Images)
Rihanna in 2025 in Los Angeles. (Image credit: DUTCH/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images via Getty Images)

Rihanna’s style legacy is one of fearless reinvention and radical visibility. She has never been content to follow fashion, instead preferring to redirect it, redefined it, and reimagined its possibilities. From red carpets to airport runways, she’s made statements without saying a word.

And, in a world that often demands women shrink themselves, Rihanna has only expanded, taking up space, claiming pleasure, and dressing on her own terms. She’s opened doors, broken rules, and inspired future generations to do the same.

Shop Rihanna-Inspired Fashion

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