Kate Moss Fronts Self-Portrait’s Unfiltered SS26 Campaign, “Portraits of Kate”

by OVERSTANDARD
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Self-Portrait trades glossy sets for gritty authenticity in its latest campaign, “Portraits of Kate,” placing none other than Kate Moss in the spotlight—no narrative, no filters, just pure presence. Captured by Johnny Dufort and styled by Moss herself, the campaign walks the line between high fashion and candid street realism, set against the iconic neighborhoods of LondonMarylebone, Mayfair, and Soho.

Far from a constructed fantasy, this is Moss on her terms. “I was given total freedom,” she shares. “I chose what I wanted to wear as if it were my own clothes. The light was good, the neighborhood I love… and suddenly the real paparazzi arrived.” The images feel less like a fashion campaign and more like a visual diary, revealing a natural, voyeuristic snapshot of a style legend in motion.

The concept underscores Self-Portrait’s evolving ethos: celebrating how women really dress today, with pieces that don’t require performance. Founder Han Chong distills it perfectly: “With Kate, you don’t need to transform her. You just let her be. Her authenticity does all the work.

In a clever twist, the campaign’s imagery was rolled out through newsagent windows across London and New York—from Fitzrovia to the Lower East Side—echoing vintage tabloid culture while reclaiming it in the name of timeless, unfiltered fashion. The result? A campaign that doesn’t sell a story—it simply lets one walk by.

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