BLACKPINK’s Jennie and Rama Duwaji Top Grazia’s NYFW FW26 Street Style
Grazia’s NYFW roundups singled out BLACKPINK’s Jennie — spotted at Calvin Klein — and Rama Duwaji, who arrived front row at Diotima in layered trenches, amid icy sidewalks and bold, fur-trimmed hats.

Grazia’s NYFW coverage landed on two very different icons this season: BLACKPINK’s Jennie, who was spotted at Calvin Klein and whose look “is gaining traction with strong likes and reposts,” and Rama Duwaji, the Syrian-American artist now styled as New York’s First Lady, who “made a front row appearance at the Diotima show” in a beige trench coat worn as a dress with another tweed trench layered over the top. Both moments came through Grazia’s reporting of NYFW Fall/Winter 2026 as off-runway dressing took center stage.
Jennie’s Calvin Klein sighting read like a study in polished minimalism against the backdrop of Manhattan’s winter. The short report naming “BLACKPINK’s Jennie” as leading a Grazia US list connected her presence at Calvin Klein to a wider social buzz: “The post featuring her look is gaining traction with strong likes and reposts.” That engagement, while unquantified, reinforced why celebrity-fronted street style remains a major vector for seasonal trends at NYFW.
At Diotima, Rama Duwaji’s appearance carried a different register. Byline “By Pema Bakshi” framed the piece that declared “Leading the best off-runway looks was none other than Syrian-American artist, Rama Duwaji,” and noted this was her first NYFW as First Lady of the city following her husband Zohran Mamdani’s inauguration as mayor of New York City earlier this year. The outfit — a beige trench coat as a dress layered with a tweed trench over the top — read simultaneously ceremonial and streetwise, a sartorial echo of Duwaji’s public role and the city’s shifting civic choreography.
Grazia’s broader roundup mapped the designers that shaped those moments: Calvin Klein, Ralph Lauren, Diotima, Michael Kors, Proenza Schouler, and Coach. The magazine captured the texture of the week in plain terms: “Layers of knits sat beneath inventive tailoring, dramatic furs and bold hats were around every corner, and boots of all varieties became a practical solution to icy sidewalks.” These details explain how practical winter dressing translated into visual spectacle for photographers and feeds alike.
The front rows themselves were a constellation of names. Graziamagazine listed “Jennie Kim, Dakota Johnson, Nara Smith, Alexa Chung and Jodie Turner-Smith” among the head-turning attendees, underscoring how celebrity silhouettes — from Jennie’s Calvin Klein moment to Duwaji’s twin trenches at Diotima — shaped the season’s off-runway conversation. Between frigid weather and runway reveals, Grazia’s coverage framed NYFW FW26 as a moment when streetwear sensibility met tailored refinement.
Off-runway fashion, Grazia suggested, is “buzzing as a must-see for streetwear enthusiasts.” Expect the trench layering, knit-under-suit combinations, and statement headwear seen at Calvin Klein and Diotima to filter into the city’s winter street vernacular as the season unfolds.
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