Want to look fashionable – and ultra rich? Dress in cream, beige or off-white


By AGENCY

Brunello Cucinelli thinks that his eponymous brand probably helped popularise bland colours. Shades of latte, oatmeal, cream, butterscotch, cafe au lait are extremely trendy right now. Photo: Brunello Cucinelli

In past eras, the wealthy tended to attire themselves in the richest of colours: indigo, crimson, the purple of nobilities and kings. We are no longer in that era.

These days, the hue preferred by the richest people on Earth is that most bland and mousy of non-colours – beige.

For Lindsey Woodcock, a luxury travel consultant, the beige onslaught first revealed itself on the terraces and streets of St. Moritz, Switzerland, the exclusive Alpine resort town where she lives part-time.

“It becomes something you can’t not see, said Woodcock, who also has residences in London and Sun Valley, Idaho.

“There are flocks of people cruising around entirely in cream or beige or off-white.”

Against the backdrop of an anti-elitist mood in the US and Europe, the privileged world of St Moritz has become a place of soothing neutrals.

You see it at shops like the cashmere purveyor Lamm, in the lobby of Badrutt’s Palace Hotel and on the terrace of the Paradiso restaurant, with its views of the Engadine Valley.

Why is this? The question was put to Alessandro Sartori, the artistic director of Ermenegildo Zegna, the Italian luxury goods label known for outfitting corporate titans and tech moguls.

“The ultrawealthy don’t want to show off, and beige colours are good in that sense,” Sartori said by phone from Milan.

“This class of people is super discreet and doesn’t want to be seen.”

Read more: Shhh, no logos and labels... How quiet luxury endures as a fashion trend

To be fashionably superrich, he suggested, is to be clad in the anodyne colours of baby food, tea cookies or screen savers: latte, oatmeal, cream, butterscotch, cafe au lait.

“It is all within a limited tonality – stylish, but not too much out of the perimeter of being noticeable,” Sartori said.

For Andre De Farias, a Brazilian entrepreneur who spends winter at the Swiss resort town, the reassuring tones – restful, luxe, uncontroversial – are consistent with the overall tastes of the ultrarich.

“It’s a crowd that values quality over quantity, and authenticity over showiness,” De Farias said by email.

“It’s a mature kind of luxury that doesn’t seek external validation.”

If bold hues once were a tell for wealth, now a preference for quiet colours has evolved into a “statement of luxury and power”, according to Filippo Ricci, the creative director of Stefano Ricci, a superluxury menswear purveyor in Florence, Italy.

“If you want a chair in crocodile that is like a throne, we can provide it,” Ricci said.

Yet, even among the crocodile-throne set, he has noticed a shift.

“My feeling is that colour will eventually come back,” he said. “But right now, everybody likes beige.”

Certain members of the rarefied classes have adopted the related fashion strategy of dressing down.

In particular, two social fixtures of St Moritz – Rolf Sachs, an heir to several industrial fortunes and the proprietor of the exclusive Dracula Club, and his longtime companion, German fashion designer and princess Mafalda of Hesse, favour what might be termed the zillionaire ragamuffin look.

In keeping with the shift away from bright hues among the wealthy, the Pantone Color Institute has named “mocha mousse” its 2025 "Colour of the Year".

In selecting this shade, the Pantone committee was inspired by the feelings it evoked of “comfort, indulgence and subtle elegance”, said Leatrice Eiseman, the institute’s executive director.

“When we do colour/word association, the creams, the taupes, the camels signify that something has longevity, lineage, is long lasting and secure,” she added.

As global markets are roiled, the richest of the rich hunker down in khaki camouflage.

Beige tones, said Robert H Frank, a retired professor of economics at Cornell University and the author of Luxury Fever: Why Money Fails To Satisfy In An Era Of Excess, send a particular signal.

Read more: Fashion loves them big: There is a current appeal for everything oversized

“You don’t need to have bright, screaming colours to announce your presence,” he said.

“You have assets aplenty in reserve. You don’t need to make a big noise.”

Ask that longtime proponent of the notice-nothing look, billionaire Italian fashion magnate Brunello Cucinelli.

“Last week, I went skiing with my family, and all our ski gear was beige, brown, Panama,” Cucinelli said from his home in Solomeo, Italy.

“I do not want to sound bigheaded, but when I first came out with these colours – a Panama corduroy suit, ecru jackets for winter – people thought, ‘Only the pope can wear these colours!’”

“I’m a little shy to say it," he continued, “But I’m convinced that I took a little bit of a part in this change of colours.”

And if more and more wealthy people have suddenly decided to adopt those shades as an intrinsic part of their uniform, so much the wiser.

“Basically, that displays how smart they are,” Cucinelli said – ©2025 The New York Times Company

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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fashion , trends , quiet luxury

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