With flame-orange hair and a wardrobe that flips Y2K glam into futuristic streetwear, Ice Spice’s NYLON shoot is pure visual chaos—in the best way.
Ice Spice doesn’t just wear fashion—she weaponizes it. In her September 2025 editorial for NYLON Magazine, shot by Lea Winkler, the Bronx-born rapper turns every frame into a moodboard of maximalist rebellion. It’s not just a photoshoot—it’s a manifesto.

From rooftop fur to squatting in silver stilettos, Ice Spice’s poses are unapologetically performative. She’s not modeling clothes—she’s modeling attitude. And every look feels like a character pulled from a manga-meets-Moschino fever dream.

The styling is a kaleidoscope of textures and silhouettes. A white cropped top paired with a royal blue skirt that spills into a dramatic train—pure editorial fantasy. Then there’s the black bra top with an oversized white bow, matched with a mini skirt printed upside-down with “NEW YORK CITY”—a wink to her roots and a flip of convention. The silver-gray zippered bodysuit is pure cyber siren, while the graphic tank and studded belt combo scream early-2000s MTV with a Gen Z filter.
Chunky necklaces, patterned heels, and a cream fur coat thrown over a pink top—each accessory feels like a punchline to a visual joke only Ice Spice gets to tell. The synergy is chaotic, but intentional. Even the black cat in one frame feels like part of the styling brief: mysterious, sleek, and slightly menacing.

This shoot lands at the intersection of streetwear, performance art, and post-Instagram fashion. Ice Spice is part of a new wave of artists who treat style as storytelling—where every outfit is a lyric, every pose a beat drop. Her NYLON spread feels like a visual mixtape: part Bratz doll, part Blade Runner, all her.
Hair is long, straight, and dyed a blazing orange—her signature flame. Makeup is clean but sculpted, with a focus on lashes and contour. The overall mood is high-contrast, high-impact, and hyper-aware. It’s fashion that knows it’s being watched—and leans in.