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Jaden Smith and his milestones in the fashion world 

Why does it make sense for Christian Louboutin to have hired Jaden Smith as creative director?

Jaden Smith and his milestones in the fashion world 

When Christian Louboutin announced that Jaden Smith was becoming the first external creative director of his menswear line, the news wasn’t read as just another celebrity collaboration. It was read as a pretty significant image change. The guy who had been used by fashion as an image for a decade was now entering one of the most important European luxury houses as an author, with real power over product, narrative, and aesthetic direction.

Now, he has presented his first collection as head of design at Louboutin, and it’s not just that he’s going to design shoes, is it? He’s going to define how the Louboutin man looks, moves, and desires in 2026. But why does it make sense for Jaden Smith to be Louboutin’s creative director? Let’s take a look back.

1. El chico que rompió el binarismo en Louis Vuitton

In 2016, Jaden Smith became the first man to star in an LV women’s campaign: a mainstream face legitimizing genderless clothing before the industry turned it into a marketing tool in itself. When Nicolas Ghesquière dressed him in a skirt for Louis Vuitton’s womenswear campaign, the cultural statement was made.

This set a precedent that we now see as normal, with more and more brands such as Ludovic de Saint Sernin, Palomo Spain, and JW Anderson presenting their designs in the non-binary arena, but in 2016 it was something very radical.

2. MSFTSrep: Jaden’s streetwear brand

He founded his own brand alongside his sister Willow Smith back in 2015, and managed, in part, to create a cultural tribe even before brands such as Corteiz or Justin Bieber’s own SKLRYK existed on the market.

    3. Jaden, his dreadlocks, and his heels at the 2017 Met Gala

    At the 2017 MET Gala, Jaden Smith arrived with his dreadlocks in his hand and his patent leather heeled boots. It wasn’t shock value: it was a reflection on identity, body, and detachment. Very much in line with what fashion artists and performers such as Michèle Lamy and Rick Owens do. It’s not a costume, but rather a look that tells you something more.

    4. The body as a fashion object

    Jaden has been one of the few men in the mainstream who has used fashion not to appear stronger, bigger, or more dominant, but precisely to expose the body as something fragile, beautiful, and ambiguous. Clinging, translucent, soft, romantic silhouettes, sometimes almost feminine. This connects directly with the type of eroticism that defines Louboutin: not that of brute force, but that of fetish, vulnerability, and desire.

    5. JJaden is an insider in the fashion world, even though it may seem otherwise

    In 2018, Jaden began modeling and sitting front row at fashion shows in Paris and Milan as part of the creative ecosystem—not as a celebrity guest. Especially at Louis Vuitton, Comme des Garçons, and Sacai, Jaden appears integrated into the fashion circuit as a spokesperson, aesthetic reference, and constant presence backstage and in the front rows.

    This marks a change: he is no longer an icon that brands “dress” but someone who inhabits the fashion system from within.

    This step explains why a house like Louboutin can now give him a real creative role: because he has been playing that role informally for years.

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