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Zoë Kravitz and Harry Styles favor quiet-luxury totes this summer

Zoë Kravitz and Harry Styles are turning the oversized tote into summer’s quiet status symbol, with The Row’s $1,350 Estelle setting the tone.

Sofia Martinez··5 min read
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Zoë Kravitz and Harry Styles favor quiet-luxury totes this summer
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Zoë Kravitz and Harry Styles have made a roomy tote feel like the sharpest accessory in the room. Marie Claire has been watching Kravitz wear The Row’s Estelle Tote, a $1,350 braided rectangle with elongated shoulder straps and a zipper-free top, a bag that reads beach-ready even when it is thrown over colder-weather layers. Styles has been carrying a similarly toned, The Row-coded tote, and together they make the case for the quiet-luxury carryall as summer’s new status signal: practical, polished, and almost aggressively unflashy.

Why the oversized tote wins now

This is the kind of bag that works because it says something without performing for the room. When 92.4 percent of readers are only viewing, not sharing or commenting, the strongest style cue is the one that lands instantly, and a soft-spoken tote does that better than a logo-heavy trophy bag. It looks expensive at a glance, but not desperate to prove it.

The appeal is in the balance. A truly good oversized tote makes life easier, carries the day, and still looks considered when you set it beside a café chair or tuck it under your arm in the evening. That combination of ease and polish is exactly why the style feels like a status signal for now.

The Estelle Tote is the template

The Row’s Estelle Tote gets so much traction because it is not trying to be precious. The braided construction gives it texture, the rectangular shape keeps it disciplined, and the elongated strap lets it sit with a relaxed shoulder-line rather than a stiff handbag posture. At $1,350, it is firmly in investment territory, but it earns that place by looking refined rather than loud.

Marie Claire notes that Kravitz has been wearing the bag regularly since at least March 2026, which matters more than a one-off sighting. Repetition is what turns an accessory into a signature, and in this case the signature is restraint. A zipper-free opening only reinforces the feeling: this is the kind of bag that belongs to a wardrobe built around movement, not display.

    If you are reading the code correctly, the bag’s most useful details are the ones that feel almost invisible:

  • Braided or woven texture that catches light without shouting
  • A rectangular or structured body that keeps it from collapsing into slouch
  • Long shoulder straps that make it look effortless, not formal
  • A neutral, light brown palette that feels polished with summer whites and darker transitional layers

What old money dressing looks like in 2026

The old-money look has always relied on control, but the current version is softer around the edges. Marie Claire’s shopping language for the aesthetic still centers tailored basics, striped sweaters, and quiet-luxury names like Hermès and The Row, yet the summer interpretation leans coastal, not buttoned-up. It is less about guarding the dress code and more about looking like you understand it without needing to announce it.

That is why the oversized tote fits so neatly into the category. It plays nicely with crisp tailoring, easy summer layers, and the kind of clothing that already does the quiet work. Think clean lines, unfussy shapes, and fabrics that feel good in heat, not just look good in photographs.

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The bigger bag shift is all about texture

WWD’s read on summer 2026 handbags sharpens the picture: the season is moving toward texture, craft, and personality instead of pure logo status. Raffia, crochet, fringe, gathered soft shapes, and color accents are doing the heavy lifting now, which is a meaningful shift away from bags that behave like billboards. The message is clear: craftsmanship is back in the lead.

That makes the Kravitz and Styles tote story more than couple symmetry. It sits right at the intersection of celebrity influence and a broader turn toward tactile, investment-worthy carryalls that look expensive because of their material language, not because of a giant brand stamp. A tote like this can coexist with the more sculptural, artisanal energy of the season while still reading distinctly old-money in tone.

Why the couple angle still matters

Zoë Kravitz and Harry Styles work as a share hook because they already signal style fluency to readers who like to decode the details. Marie Claire has previously framed them as a fashion-forward pair with coordinated casual dressing, and that pattern makes the matching tote feel like part of an ongoing visual conversation rather than a random paparazzi moment. E! traced their first public sighting to Italy in August 2025, and later reported matching “Let It Rip” tattoos amid June 2026 engagement chatter, which only strengthened the sense that their style communication runs on subtle cues.

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Photo by Moe Magners

That is precisely why the tote resonates. It belongs to a larger language of low-volume luxury, where the most compelling accessory is the one that looks useful first and status-driven second. For summer, that means skipping the flashy bag and choosing the one that can handle a beach day, a city errand, and a polished dinner all at once.

How to wear the new quiet-luxury tote

The smartest way to style a tote like this is to keep everything else sharp and spare. Tailored basics give it structure, while a striped sweater or a coastal summer staple keeps the look aligned with the old-money code Marie Claire keeps circling back to. Let the bag be the tactile element, then keep the rest of the outfit calm enough to let its shape and braid do the talking.

The result is a more modern kind of affluence: one that values ease over excess, craft over noise, and discretion over display. The smartest summer tote does not ask to be noticed; it simply makes everything else look a little too loud.

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