Your Summer Pinup Style Playbook
Bettie, Marilyn, Sophia, Elizabeth and Grace offer five different ways to approach vintage glamour
By: The Lace Ledger Staff
Summer arrives with fresh possibilities.
Longer days stretch into sun-soaked afternoons. Plans take shape somewhere between a picnic, a beach day, a shopping excursion, a BBQ and the promise of staying out a little longer. The question of what to wear begins to bloom with possibility.
It is the perfect season to revisit a style that was built for exactly this kind of light; the pinup aesthetic has always belonged to summer.
The word “pinup” suggests a singular image. A confident woman. A defined silhouette. A certain kind of pose. In practice, it was never quite that narrow. The women who shaped the look approached it differently. Bettie Page preferred a little mischief with her looks while Marilyn Monroe embodied bombshell energy with the wiggle dress. Sophia Loren brought unforgettable curves to coastal glamour, Elizabeth Taylor treated every look like a high-contrast close-up and Grace Kelly moved through elegance with effortless control.
Each offers a distinct mood, forming a summer style guide of pinup-inspired possibilities, from cherry prints and polka dots to silhouettes that shift depending on who is wearing them.
In the Atelier with Videnoir: Gothic Lingerie as Living Art
Darkly inspired designs created to be worn, and impossible not to photograph
By: Amanda Albert
Videnoir’s distinctly gothic visual language draws from a lifelong affinity for the dark, shaped by film, history, art, and architecture. This foundation is reinforced by more than fifteen years of dressmaking experience and a lineage rooted in corsetry and atelier work, carried forward through study and practice.
The design house moves with a near-devotional focus on precise pattern making and refined fit. Construction is approached with equal care, balancing comfort with a strong visual point of view. Each decision is made in close proximity to the body it is intended to shape.
In our conversation with Alice, Videnoir’s co-founder, we step inside the technical architecture behind each piece. She reflects on the references that inform the work, as well as the collections still to come.
Designed for the Divine: National Lingerie Day, Properly Observed
13 female-founded labels creating lingerie for the divine feminine
By: The Lace Ledger Staff
The divine feminine appears the moment instinct is no longer edited. She is intuitive, complicated, occasionally feral and entirely uninterested in being polite for the sake of someone else’s comfort. Lingerie designed for her does not attempt to smooth the edges, it celebrates the body exactly as it exists. Every curve. Every dimple. Even the sharp edge of your attitude.
In honour of National Lingerie Day, we gathered 13 labels founded by women who understand this philosophy intimately. These designers create pieces that treat lingerie as expression.
If your lingerie drawer has been feeling uninspired, the below designers have suggestions. Consider this your lingerie drawer upgrade.
After Dark: A Dark Feminine Guide to Spring Sleepwear
From vintage-inspired nightgowns to oversized bat robes, these pieces make midnight feel like a dress code
By: The Lace Ledger Staff
We respect the humble concert tee. It has carried many of us through late nights and questionable television choices.
Still, there are evenings that call for something slightly more interesting. A true-crime marathon deserves better. So does a smutty paperback, a midnight snack, or a last-minute girls’ night that somehow ends with someone opening a second bottle of wine.
We’ve curated a dark feminine sleepwear edit for evenings that deserve better styling.
The (Haunted) Fairytale Atelier: A Conversation with Linda Friesen
Exploring the gothic imagination behind one of bridal fashion’s most distinctive couturiers
By: Amanda Albert
Once upon a time, a wonderfully weird bride wandered through an endless forest of boring bridal salons brimming with underwhelming ivory gowns. Every rack looked the same, every dress scrubbed of mystery. How dull and disappointing…
At the edge of that forest, stood a delightfully different door. Inside waited an atelier where soft velvet replaces itchy tulle, where storied shadows are welcomed in for afternoon tea and beautiful brides who dream in darker colours bring their visions to life <3.
That atelier, our atelier, belongs to Linda Friesen, a designer whose work reads like myth rendered in real-life. From her studio, Friesen creates gowns shaped by historical memory, narrative imagination, fantasy + fairytale and a romantic gothic sensibility that allows fantasy to coexist with expert craftsmanship.
Brides arrive at her door in search of something that doesn’t exist on ordinary racks, then leave carrying a garment that feels born from their most authentic selves.
In Friesen’s world, couture becomes a form of storytelling, with every seam, silhouette and shade serving the spell of a dark fairytale. Here, we step inside her studio as she reflects on the stories that shape her signature style.
19 Female-Led Gothic Brands We Love
An International Women’s Day edit of dark feminine brands defining modern gothic fashion and beauty
By: The Lace Ledger Staff
These are the baddies that get us. The women building the pieces we actually want to wear because they exist inside the same subculture. They understand our references, our humour, our obsessions and our challenges.
They make cool shit that lands because it’s ours—designed by women who understand the pure joy of putting on an outfit that makes you feel totally yourself.
For International Women’s Day, and long after the hashtag fades, we love backing the women-led brands that create exceptional work inside our community, shaping the aesthetic we inhabit.
The Bride, Reclaimed: Monstrous Femininity & the Gothic Feminist Revival
A dark feminine meditation on legacy, anger and creation—reframing The Bride of Frankenstein not as monster, but as muse
By: The Lace Ledger Staff
When a woman refuses to fall in line, history calls her monstrous. When she creates something from her own rage, it calls her dangerous.
The Bride of Frankenstein has been stuck in that purgatory, since her inception.
Born from stitched flesh and male ambition in the classic telling of The Bride of Frankenstein, she was never granted a meaningful existence. She appears, she recoils, she rejects and she is destroyed. Her autonomy is treated as an error in the experiment.
With the latest reimagining of The Bride, the cultural appetite has shifted. She is no longer a cautionary tale, but evolving from monster to dark feminine muse.
Dark Feminine Fashion Forecast: SS26 Style Through a Gothic Lens
A runway report and market edit translating Circuscore, Poetcore, Romantic Vamp and more
By: The Lace Ledger Staff
Spring arrives with its unapologetic brightness goth hiss, with longer afternoons that press gold against the pavement and evenings that linger just enough to tempt bare shoulders into the open air.
Linen appears in shop windows. Florals begin their annual campaign for dominance. The sun stretches its reach across hemlines and collarbones, daring those of us sworn to shadow to soften our silhouettes in surrender.
Fear not, fellow darklings. Edge does not evaporate at twenty degrees.
This season’s designer trends offer a study in recalibration (not retreat), showcasing how dark feminine dressing can move with the heat while preserving its authority.
Dark Feminine Devotion: A Gothic Engagement Ring Guide for Your Beloved
Six shadow-kissed styles for your forever
By: The Lace Ledger Staff
Goth girlies love diamonds too; they simply prefer them with a pulse. The question is never whether to choose brilliance, but how to shape it into something that feels like her—dark without drifting into costume, romantic without collapsing into kitsch.
An engagement ring carries the weight of promise, which makes discernment essential, especially when taste leans toward velvet shadows and cathedral light. The line between dramatic and theatrical can be perilously thin, and devotion deserves better than novelty.
Consider this a guide through that threshold, where edge meets heirloom and symbolism holds its nerve.
The Alt Bride Ascends: Dark Feminine Bridal Fashion
A refined fashion edit for brides who favour statement over convention
By: The Lace Ledger Staff
Da da da dum… a hush falls over the room as the bride steps into view, the air tightening before breath returns in a collective exhale. Her dress, and the confidence with which she inhabits it, leaves the guests momentarily stunned, the groom most of all.
This is not a silhouette chosen to appease expectation; it is a gown that mirrors her inner self, whether through sharpened corsetry, darkened lace, unexpected colour or a hemline that refuses tradition. For the alt bride, the aisle is not a compromise but a reveal, and what she wears should feel like culmination.
Below is a meditation on seven styles that sit just to the left of tradition and the designers that do them well.
Dracula’s Garden Party: Romantic Vampire Style Guide for Spring 2026
A warm-weather guide to dark feminine dressing past daybreak
By: The Lace Ledger Staff
The Romantic Vampire does not vanish with the sunrise; she adapts. As daylight lengthens and the air grows warm goth hiss, her style remains darkly elegant.
Designers across SS26 couture runways have reworked dark feminine staples with a lighter hand, softening leather into something that feels more romantic, elevating black lace from reading “lingerie” to “ladylike” and using colour with intention. The result is a gothic vocabulary that feels fluid and wearable, translating shadowed glamour into looks suited for twilight dinners and sunlit courtyards.
With Dracula: A Love Tale arriving this month, the appetite for dark romance undeniable—what SS26 offers is the translation: a field guide to dressing with dark devotion that survives the daylight.
Dressing the Unruly Heart: Wuthering Heights and Brontëcore Fashion De-Coded
The Brontë sisters wrote love as something wild, all-consuming; a force that unsettles neat-and-tidy lives rather than completing them. Wuthering Heights stands as the most feral expression of this philosophy, where love is not a destination but a state of emotional exposure, impossible to contain and destructive to ignore.
That unrest sits at the heart of the latest cinematic interpretation of the story, starring Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi, where costume, loosely historically inspired, becomes an extension of emotional volatility, translating internal turmoil into silhouettes that move as though the wearer cannot remain still.
The same sensibility surfaced across the Spring/Summer 2026 runways, where designers returned to feeling as a governing principle, allowing clothes to amplify emotion.
Below, we’ve pulled key looks from the film, alongside SS26 runway references and market fashion pieces, to translate this dark romantic language into something you can wear now.
A Dark Femme’s Guide to Regency-Core
Bridgerton’s pastel fantasy, rewritten
By: The Lace Ledger Staff
Regency dress returns this season in Bridgerton’s Season 4. Pastels surface again, metallics catch candlelight and empire waistlines reassert their neat, architectural authority over the body. These elements no longer read as girlhood innocence or performative propriety; they are strategy, Gentle Readers.
This season’s fixation on “the lady with the silver gown” reframes the silhouette entirely. Like Cinderella before midnight, she appears without explanation and vanishes before clarity arrives. Her ethereal ensemble attracts attention without surrendering motive (or, identity).
Below, we trace Regency-core from its designer expression on the SS26 couture runways to its pop-culture resurgance through Bridgerton’s latest season. From there, we turn inward, translating the look through a dark feminine lens that borrows the silhouette, symbolism and structure, rewritten for women who want romance with authority and softness with a little edge.
Opiumcore in Winter: Dark Elegance Against the Cold
A visceral style edit inspired by couture collections
By: The Lace Ledger Staff
Opiumcore surfaces when minimalism feels much too polite. It restores tension to the act of dressing by pulling in avant-garde influences.
As a style concept, opiumcore draws from darkness and devotion, favouring inky blacks and jewel tones shaped by silhouettes that mix close-to-the-body forms with oversized flow.
The aesthetic thrives on contrast. Rich, saturated colour presses against winter’s stark light.
This season, opiumcore resonates because it reflects the season honestly. Winter strips the world all the back to simply shadow and structure. This is a style that meets that severity in the snow without softening its edges.
The Discipline of Dress: Tracing Fetish Fashion Through Couture Collections
Designer inspo, market shopping guide and functional (but discreet) fetish adornments
By: The Lace Ledger Staff
Fetish fashion did not begin on the runway, but it has also never stayed confined to the bedroom.
Long before latex and harnesses became street-style shorthand, designers were borrowing the visual language of kink to challenge how clothing relates to power.
What began as taboo iconography evolved into a design vocabulary that speaks fluently in silhouette, material and intention.
Today, fetish fashion moves easily between couture ateliers, city sidewalks, quiet luxury wardrobes and mass-produced fast-fashion brands, no longer requiring shock value to feel transgressive.
Dressed for the Downturn: Sad Girl Chic
Styling for emotional authenticity and rituals for release
By: The Lace Ledger Staff
Some days are heavy, and pretending otherwise only makes them linger.
Sad Girl Chic is not about wallowing, but about letting the feeling move through you until it loosens its grip.
This is an aesthetic built for emotional honesty, where dressing becomes an act of self-regulation.
Think of it as wringing out a soaked rag, so tomorrow arrives softer.
Garments with a Pulse: A Conversation with Beloved Fashion Designer, Evan Clayton
An exploration of early inspiration, gothic influences and his latest collection
By: Amanda Albert
Fashion, at its highest level, is wearable sculpture. It is an art form designed to move the body and the mind, in tandem.
Because it resists practicality, it is often misunderstood as excessive, theatrical or, frankly, weird. What it truly resists is complacency.
Evan’s work belongs to this lineage of fashion as cultural intervention. Each collection is built as an emotional architecture rather than a seasonal offering designed to dress trips to the grocery store.
His garments carry narrative, emotion, defiance and devotion with weight meant to endure. On the runway, the story each collection carries unfolds as performance art.
In an era that largely flattens fashion into trend cycles, Evan insists on depth. He designs not to decorate the body, but to transform how we experience it.
We had the pleasure of sitting down with Evan to discuss his latest collection, what came before and what we can expect next.