Every year, Revolve Fest operates as fashion's most chaotic mood board — a sun-drenched proving ground where trends either arrive fully formed or dissolve into the desert heat. This season, the looks ranged from maximalist armor to quiet cowgirl glamour, but the common thread was intention. Nobody stumbled into these outfits. We scoured the grounds to capture the standout aesthetics making their mark this weekend. From silver chainmail to boho crochet, here's every look that had us stopping mid-stride on the grass this weekend.
The Y2K revival is officially in full swing, and nobody made the case for it better than the girl in oversized, paint-splattered carpenter shorts worn low on the hips, paired with a tiny cropped graphic tee and chunky Timberland boots. Layered chains, tiny tinted glasses, an orange mini purse, a scarf tied at the waist — the whole thing reads like chaos on paper but lands with total precision in person. Then the girl interviewing her looked just as good — a cream halter top, a silver coin-embellished belt slung over wide purple trousers, stacked white bangles. Two festival girls, two completely different takes on the same Y2K energy, both fully committed.

Crochet is never leaving Coachella, and we're at peace with that — especially when it shows up like this. A white long-sleeved crop with a keyhole cutout worn over a matching micro skirt, cinched with a wide cream leather belt, finished with tall white cowboy boots and a fringe suede bag. Every single element is considered. The whole look has a ease to it that's hard to fake, bohemian at heart but with enough structure and intention to feel genuinely elevated rather than thrown together.


Ava is a Creative Editor at OOTD. She moved to New York City at 18 to pursue a career in fashion and now covers your favorite fashion figures, events, and trends.
A fitted chocolate-brown turtleneck dress, ruched and body-conscious, worn with a woven cowboy hat, dark narrow sunglasses, a chunky belt, and lace-up gladiator heels. The all-brown palette could have read flat but instead it reads incredibly intentional — warm, sleek, and effortlessly cool. Proof that it is the era of accessories and she picked all the best ones to compliment her.
A dark brown crochet fringe mini skirt, a draped bandana-style top, a wide-brimmed straw sun hat, knee-high buckled leather boots. Stacked gold bangles, layered beaded necklaces. The whole thing feels sun-drenched and instinctual, like it was assembled from a vintage haul rather than a shopping cart.


The look that stopped people cold. A full-length silver chainmail lattice dress over a nude base, chrome shield sunglasses, chunky silver earrings, metallic heels. Architectural, otherworldly, completely committed. Teyana Taylor knows how to turn heads.

A pink jeweled bralette, flowy floral-embroidered white skirt, a gold coin body chain draped low, and a jeweled headpiece catching the light.
A long flowy skirt that moves with you and conveniently covers whatever sneakers you threw on to survive a full day on your feet. The pink bralette ties directly back to the pink flowers on her skirt, and the jewelry does all the heavy lifting from there — the waist chain, the necklace, the headpiece all working together to make the whole thing feel intentional and complete. It's the rare festival look that's equal parts beautiful and actually wearable. Her partner in worn cargo trousers and a white muscle tank walking beside her only made it better.

A handcrafted turquoise crochet halter trimmed with pearls, high-waisted cream satin wide-legs, a jeweled turquoise belt, a wide black cowboy hat, shell necklace, black studded boots. The color story alone — that specific shade of turquoise against the cream satin — is worth the whole look. This is the Western-festival aesthetic done with genuine conviction rather than the costume-store version. Maximum effort, maximum payoff.

If this weekend proved anything, it's that the most memorable festival fashion has everything to do with commitment. The girls go full festival mode, whether that's full chainmail armor or paint-splattered skate shorts, the looks that land are the ones where the person wearing them clearly had a vision and saw it all the way through. Revolve Fest 2026 had plenty of those. We'll be thinking about them all summer.