Get Your Fashion Fix with These 13 Stylish Series


Buckle up, fashionistas, because it’s time to take your front-row seat at the hottest fashion shows around — and you don’t even have to leave your couch.

Editors, celebrities, and top models rack up their frequent flier miles every year jetting around the globe to attend the most elite shows and events. But how can you take part in the style parade from the comfort of your own home? By putting some especially well-dressed content on your agenda, naturally! We’ve rounded up 13 series available to stream that capture the glitz and glamour of the fashion world, from inside-the-industry docuseries to scripted shows that are pure fantasy. Enjoy these year-round –– fashion entertainment never goes out of style.

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7 Days Out

Each episode of 7 Days Out documents the hectic week leading up to a major occasion, capturing the excitement in the air and illuminating the processes behind coordinating some of the most thrilling events in the world. The docuseries’ fifth episode (directed by series executive producer Andrew Rossi, who also directed the Met Gala documentary The First Monday in May) applies this treatment to Chanel’s Spring 2018 Haute Couture fashion show, which — presided over by the inimitable Karl Lagerfeld, who died in 2019 — is a perfect dream of airy blush tulle, cascading fuchsia ribbons, and more than a few impeccably cut tweed suits, naturellement. To watch these almost unfathomably beautiful clothes (and a venue worthy of showcasing them) come together is the most delectable of French treats.

Abstract: The Art of Design

There’s so much more that goes into the creation of clothing — or anything — than the wearer even imagines. But in this docuseries, created by Scott Dadich in 2017, masters of their respective design fields take you deep into the details of their work. For a stylish double dose, call up two episodes with artists dedicated to what we wear: First, Season 1, Episode 2 profiles legendary Nike footwear designer Tinker Hatfield, renowned for his inventive work on Air Jordans. Next, queue up  Season 2, Episode 3, which spotlights costume designer Ruth E. Carter, celebrated for her many collaborations with Spike Lee and her unforgettable, Oscar-winning vision of Black Panther’s Wakanda wardrobe. 

Bridgerton

Though the Shondaland–produced smash-hit romance series takes place about two centuries ago (albeit with a slightly updated soundtrack), its elaborate period wardrobe, dreamed up by costume designers Ellen Mirojnick (Season 1), Sophie Canale (Season 2), and John Glaser (Season 3, beginning May 16), has had a major present-day impact. Ever since Bridgerton’s premiere in late 2020, its vision of early 19th-century style with a modern twist has maintained a firm grip on the fashion world’s imagination, bolstering the romantic “Regencycore” trend and inspiring countless pop-ups, window displays, and capsule collections of puff sleeves and empire waists, all rendered in soft florals. With everyone on the show dressing like that, it’s no wonder all the Bridgertons keep falling in love!

Emily in Paris

Watching Emily during Paris Fashion Week in late September would be as fitting as any of Emily’s couture gowns, but like a fresh butter croissant, it might be hard to resist enjoying all year round. Darren Star’s romantic comedy series stars Lily Collins in the title role, as an optimistic — if somewhat clueless — American who moves to Paris, where she navigates her career and relationships in the foreign setting. While her mangled French speech can get her into trouble, her Americanized conception of French style is not without its charms (or accessories!). To make Emily a style icon for a new era of TV, Star brought in a secret weapon: his Sex and the City collaborator, the legendary Patricia Field, served as consulting costume designer on the series. (Costume designer Marylin Fitoussi, who collaborated with Field during Seasons 1 and 2, took the sartorial reins for Seasons 3 and 4.)

The Fabulous

This K-drama gives you a front-row seat to the glamorous world of Korean fashion. The series follows a group of BFFs in their late 20s — a model, a photographer, a designer, and a brand marketer — living and working in Seoul’s high-pressure fashion industry. These friends have to navigate those demanding jobs alongside romantic dilemmas and just living life. You’ll be charmed by the story as much as you’re envious of everyone’s ensembles. 

Glow Up

No look is complete without the right makeup to set it off, and runway shows don’t just forecast what clothes we’ll be wearing next season — they also set beauty trends that will take over Sephora carts and TikTok feeds in the coming months. Glow Up, five seasons of which are streaming on Netflix, is a British reality competition that does for cosmetics what a certain other British reality competition did for desserts. Watch it for fresh ideas, to refine your own technique, or just to be amazed by what these makeup artists are capable of.

Gossip Girl

Have you heard? This now-classic teen drama of the late aughts, created by Josh Schwartz and Stephanie Savage and based on Cecily von Ziegesar’s novel series, is available for streaming in its entirety — and no less juicy than it was 15 years ago. It’s so much more than just a scandalous chronicle of the intrigue-filled social lives of privileged Manhattan teens, however; it’s also a landmark of TV fashion, a veritable runway show of the hottest looks and labels of 2007–2012. The six-season series stars Blake Lively, Leighton Meester, Penn Badgley, and more, with Kristen Bell serving as the voice of Gossip Girl, the mysterious narrator. XOXO. 

Halston

Ewan McGregor won an Emmy for his performance in Halston, in which he starred as the titular fashion designer. The Ryan Murphy–produced Netflix original miniseries follows the icon of ’70s minimalist glamour through the highlights and low points of his dazzling career, from victory at the legendary 1973 Battle of Versailles fashion show to decadent nights at Studio 54 to his misunderstood (yet ahead of its time) diffusion line in the early ’80s. With an obsessive attention to period detail and McGregor’s irresistible centralperformance, Halston is a stylish portrait of a singular American artist.

Next in Fashion

Every fashionista is looking out for what’s next in the industry, so why not hit play on a series devoted to the same thing? Enter Next in Fashion, Netflix’s original fashion reality competition, in which a group of talented up-and-coming designers complete a variety of challenges (including swimwear, Met Gala looks, recycled fashion, and more) in hopes of winning the title of fashion’s next big name — as well as a $200,000 prize and the chance to launch their own collection with Rent the Runway.

Queer Eye host and style expert Tan France returned for Season 2, with an extremely fashionable new co-host by his side: TV personality and supermodel Gigi Hadid. Together, they counseled the second round of designer hopefuls as they presented their ensembles to a revolving door of VIP guest judges. The series is packed with pure creativity … and a little healthy competition.

Styling Hollywood

It takes a whole lot of work to create an unforgettable red-carpet moment — and not just on the part of the designer. Putting the right gown on the right star is an art form in its own right, and Jason Bolden is a master of it. The celebrity stylist (who also appears in a recurring capacity as a judge on Next in Fashion) and his husband, interior designer Adair Curtis, work together to beautify Hollywood — whether through the looks the stars are wearing or the homes where they’re living — with their company JSN Studio. In the docuseries Styling Hollywood, the couple and their team are as eminently watchable as the covetable luxury items they work with.

Queer Eye

In 2018, when Netflix re-launched the early-aughts reality classic Queer Eye, it became the rare reboot that was embraced wholeheartedly by viewers and critics alike. The new version retains the original format of the “Fab Five” — a team of experts in culture, food, grooming, interior design, and, of course, fashion — coaching a person with a tenuous grasp on some or all of those disciplines. But while the original series exhibited more of the snark of its era, the reboot gives that attitude its own makeover; the new Fab Five approach their “heroes,” as they call their subjects, with great warmth and empathy. It’s TV to help you look and feel good.

Sex and the City

There have been plenty of fashionable characters on TV, but nobody’s done small-screen style quite like Carrie and the girls. The influential Sex and the City, which was created by Darren Star and ran from 1998–2004, is as beloved for its wardrobe (by the often imitated, always inimitable Patricia Field) as for its romance plots and bestie brunches. Sarah Jessica Parker’s Carrie Bradshaw, a Manhattan sex columnist with a footwear obsession and a penchant for florals, is the most famous fashionista of the pack, but her best girlfriends Samantha (Kim Cattrall), Charlotte (Kristin Davis), and Miranda (Cynthia Nixon) serve their shares of looks, too. Pour yourself a Cosmo and settle in for all six seasons. 

Survival of the Thickest

Look out New York, there’s a new style maven in town. Based on Michelle Buteau’s memoir-in-essays of the same name, Survival of the Thickest stars Buteau (who also co-created the series with Danielle Sanchez-Witzel) as Mavis Beaumont, a woman reinventing herself and rediscovering her joy after her picture-perfect life gets blown up by a bad boyfriend. Newly single and struggling, Mavis — a size-inclusive stylist with a sharp eye and a mission to make the world more fabulous — works to rebuild, in life and love, with a little help from her friends (Tasha Smith and Tone Bell). The comedy launched in 2023, and Season 2 dropped in 2025.  

Stunning Fashion and Beauty Shows To Stream NowGet inspired with these stylish shows.


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