Kendall Jenner's Bold Wedding Guest Look Sparks Color and White Debate
Kendall Jenner wore lavender and chartreuse to a Cabo wedding, and two debates erupted: her dopamine-dressing color-blocking and the Jenner family's recurring white-at-weddings dilemma.

The first question Kendall Jenner's Cabo wedding guest look generated online was not whether she'd upstaged the bride, but whether she'd worn white. Earlier in the day on March 28, the 30-year-old model was photographed on a balcony in a white sports bra and a white bathrobe tied at the waist as she helped her childhood friend Hannah Logan prepare for the ceremony. Some early coverage then circulated photos of a white crop top and draped white skirt as the outfit Jenner wore to the event itself.
What she actually changed into for the ceremony was considerably more deliberate: a fitted lavender boatneck sleeveless top paired with a floor-length chartreuse maxi skirt, a color-blocking combination that proved equally polarizing. She anchored the look with a sleek middle-parted ponytail, dainty hoop earrings, and an off-white handbag tucked under her arm.
Logan, who attended high school with Jenner in Los Angeles, married Spencer Stabler in a private destination ceremony in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. The bride wore a long gauzy veil and a white halterdress, and Jenner was among the first to photograph her dressed and ready. Later in the day, Jenner was spotted on the balcony mingling with guests, and she joined in tossing flowers as the newlyweds made their way down the aisle.
The confusion over which look was which gave the conversation two simultaneous tracks: was Jenner's color-blocking bold or jarring, and had she, even momentarily, committed the wedding guest's cardinal sin? The Jenner family has navigated this specific question before. When Kylie Jenner arrived at Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez's Venice wedding in June 2025 in a custom silvery corseted gown by Dilara Findikoglu, backlash was nearly instantaneous, centered on the gown's resemblance to white in photographs.
What Kendall's Cabo look actually demonstrates is something more instructive than a rule violation. The lavender-to-chartreuse pairing belongs squarely to the dopamine dressing movement, a styling philosophy built on high-saturation, unexpected combinations that operate as a mood rather than a dress code. The boatneck silhouette kept the whole construction from reading as resort-casual; the maxi length signaled ceremony-appropriate intent even as the color combination rejected every conventional wedding-guest instinct.
Fan response ran warm. "Absolutely love that color combo," one commenter wrote, a sentiment that circulated across platforms as Jenner's photos spread. In a season where a wedding guest's outfit now receives nearly as much editorial attention as the bridal gown, the lavender-and-chartreuse combination landed precisely where Jenner likely intended: squarely in the conversation, not outside it.
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