Julia Fox is known to have a daring fashion sense, which is why fans shouldn’t be surprised that she recently stepped out in an emsemble that left some people buzzing. Showing up at Chiltern Firehouse on Sunday, September 21, the former judge of “OMG Fashun” opted to wear a leather corset dress.
Featuring a collar with chains and ties up the full length of the piece, the star’s dress was dark brown and exposed both her chest and hips. She completed the look with a fuzzy jacket, matching purse and high heels. She wore her hair down with a wet look and just enough makeup to enhance the colors in her outfit.
Of course, that’s not to mention the fact that the dress left part of her backside exposed, according to the Daily Mail.
Fox Doesn’t Want to Wear What Everyone Else Is Wearing
GettyFox certainly stands out when she makes a public appearance and she surely wouldn’t want it any other way. Frankly, she doesn’t want to show up in the kind of outfits other people are wearing.
“In the fashion world, it’s all about wearing the big European design houses,” she told WWD in 2024. “I’m just not really about that life.”
“That doesn’t excite me, and it doesn’t make me feel good,” she said.
Fox Says Her Outfits Are ‘Normal’ in New York
GettyFox — who once interviewed to join the cast of “The Real Housewives of New York City” — says that her style isn’t such a big deal in the big city.
“To a New Yorker, [my style] is normal,” she told Allure in August. “But I could see how someone who’s not used to that would be like, ‘What’s wrong with her? What drugs is she on? What an attention-seeking [censored]. Oh my God, the makeup is ugly.’”
She added, “To me, that says more about them than it does about me, because, like, damn, you’ve never gone to the theater? You’ve never gone to a show, a museum, a fashion show? You’ve never opened an art book?”
She went on to say that what she wears “has to have some kind of meaning” and give her a chance “play that character.”
“Art is supposed to be polarizing,” she noted.
She also explained: “The way people identify you is very much based on their perception of themselves, and people are going to look at you and take whatever they will.”



