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Cardi B wins New York fashion week

Every season at fashion week, there is that one guest, glowing serenely among the camera flashes, dressed in a custom outfit, placed in the perfect seat at multiple shows. One year it was a transformed Kim Kardashian West, clad in Balmain and Givenchy; another, it was Rihanna, pulling out looks on looks on looks several months before being named Puma’s creative director.

(It’s now a thing of nostalgia, with bits of its theme song playing this week at show as diverse as Michael Kors and Vaquera.). This season’s guest-of-the-week award goes to Belcalis Almanzar, your friend Cardi B, the rapper, former “Love & Hip-Hop” star and Instagram-video queen, whose “Bodak Yellow” became the song of summer and reached No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 charts in September, the first chart topper for a solo female rapper in nearly 20 years.

In January, the 25-year-old landed five of her songs in Billboard’s top 10 in the R&B and hip-hop category, beating the record set by Beyoncé. (If you doubt the catchiness of her lyrics, listen to “Bartier Cardi” and try getting “wanna party with Cardi” out of your head afterward.)

Now Cardi B has become New York Fashion Week’s darling, with appearances at key shows: There she was in a lush green jumpsuit at Christian Siriano, a white fur throw over her shoulder and jewels encrusting her daggerlike nails; at Prabal Gurung in a coatdress and mesh heels; at Jeremy Scott in an oversize black-and-white fur coat with newspaper cutouts printed all over it and white knee-high boots; and at Alexander Wang, in a black-and-tan trench coat, a black turban wrapped around her hair, chatting with Anna Wintour, a pairing that briefly set the internet on fire.

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This New York Fashion Week is certainly not Cardi B’s first, but her style credentials have grown significantly since September’s New York shows. In an interview with Cosmopolitan magazine in December, Kollin Carter, who has been Cardi B’s stylist since the spring, said that for a period of time, some labels refused to dress his client. All that is shifting.

“Most definitely it has changed from the beginning until now,” Carter said. “Roberto Cavalli just started lending. Versace has been lending the past couple of times. Certain names are finally coming around.”

With Carter at her side, Cardi B has caught fashion’s eye with sleeker takes on the flashy style she established early on, and with showstopping looks like the floaty white butterfly Ashi dress that she wore for the Grammys red carpet, or the massive pastel blue Christian Siriano gown she wore to Rihanna’s annual charity event, the Diamond Ball.

Since September, the rapper has been on the cover not only of Rolling Stone, Billboard and New York magazines but also of more fashion-focused publications like Carine Roitfeld’s CR Fashion Book and i-D magazine. The next stop — let’s get this Cardi party on the cover of Vogue, right? — seems obvious.

The New York Times

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VALERIYA SAFRONOVA © 2018 The New York Times

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