The Catalogue Vol. VII: So You Want to Dress Like JFK Jr.? Here’s How.

FX, Disney

How Love Story revived a ‘90s icon — and why his wardrobe still works in 2026.

In this edition of The Catalogue, we revisit one of the last true American style reference points — not to romanticize him, but to understand him. John F. Kennedy Jr. didn’t dress loudly. He didn’t chase trends. He wore classic pieces with instinctive proportion and quiet confidence, mixing prep, sport, and tailoring in a way that felt personal rather than performative.

With FX’s Love Story: John F. Kennedy Jr. & Carolyn Bessette putting that era back into cultural circulation, the familiar staples have resurfaced: Kangol caps, fisherman knits, double-breasted navy suits, relaxed athletic details layered into tailoring. But this isn’t about nostalgia or imitation. It’s about identifying the principles that made the look endure — and applying them now without drifting into costume energy.

Below, six defining outfits — and the modern equivalents that make sense in 2026.

Headband, Vest, Controlled Chaos

Lawrence Schwartzwald//Getty Images

This is the look that feels almost accidental — and that’s exactly why it works. A wool sweater vest layered over a patterned button-down, athletic headband pushed back casually, boots anchoring it all. On paper, it shouldn’t make sense. But the mix of business-casual tailoring with athletic detail creates tension. The key is confidence in layering — not overstyling it.



Shop the Look

Men’s V-Neck Sweater Vest

$38.99

Thursday Boot Company Captain Lace-Up Boot

$199.99

Braylin Men’s Headbands

$8.99

SOJOS Vintage Retro Sunglasses

$15.99 [20%]

Levi's Men's Classic Western Shirt

$35.66 [6% OFF]






The Cream-and-Brown Formula

Lawrence Schwartzwald//Getty Images

JFK Jr. mastered what stylists now call the “sandwich method” without ever needing to call it that. Cream trousers, brown belt, cream shirt, brown loafers — alternating neutrals vertically. It’s subtle symmetry. The palette is soft, the structure is clean, and the effort feels nonexistent. This is how you look put-together without broadcasting that you tried.



Shop the Look

Huckberry Oxford Button Down

$98.00

Brooks Brothers Slim Fit Chinos

$71.78 [11% OFF]

SOJOS Rectangle Sunglasses

$15.99 [20% OFF]

Carhartt Men's Cotton Canvas Cap

$19.99

VATAN Genuine Leather Belt

$12.99 [46% OFF]

Bruno Magli Tonio Loafers

$395.00






Relaxed Tailoring with Texture

Lawrence Schwartzwald//Getty Images

A brown blazer and tan trousers are nothing radical. What makes this outfit distinct is texture and proportion — a fisherman beanie instead of a standard knit cap, slightly relaxed layering, a scarf that feels lived-in rather than styled. It’s not about the blazer being perfect. It’s about the balance between structure and ease.



Shop the Look

PJ PAUL JONES Waffle Button Down

$27.99 [20% OFF]

Calvin Klein Men's Slim Fit Infinite Flex Chinos

$48.44 [51% OFF]

ROYBENS Wool Fisherman Beanie

$11.99 [20% OFF]

Biddy Murphy Irish Wool Scarf

$69.25

Andres Handcrafted The Craftsman Lace Up Boot

$195.99 [9% OFF]

POPULAR ON THE CINEMA GROUP


Sweater Over Sweatpants

Stephen Rose /Getty Images

Before athleisure became a uniform, JFK Jr. was already softening it. Instead of pairing sweatpants with a hoodie, he opted for a structured knit on top. The contrast elevates the entire look. Add proper sneakers — in his case, silver-and-green Asics — and it feels intentional rather than lazy. Comfort, but with shape.



Shop the Look

Maggie’s Organics Cotton Crew Sweatshirt

$58.08 [26% OFF]

47 Brand New York Yankees HaT

$33.39 [9% OFF]

Aelfric Eden Oversized Knit Sweater Solid Vintage Pullover Sweater

$54.99

Champion Fleece Sweatpants

$27.00 [40% OFF]

ASICS Gel-Terrain Sportstyle Sneakers

$145.00





Travel Like You Mean It

Lawrence Schwartzwald//Getty Images

Airport style today is mostly about surrender. JFK Jr. treated travel like arrival. A long wool coat, Kangol cap, leather duffel — nothing flashy, just durable pieces that improve with age. It communicates presence. The message isn’t “I’m comfortable.” It’s “I’m composed.”



Shop the Look

Cenzo Italian Leather Weekender Duffel

$259.00

Kangol Seamless Wool 507 Hat

$68.00

Time Resistance Leather Garment Bag

$675.00

Vince Balmacaan Coat

$658.98




The Suit That Still Wins

Lawrence Schwartzwald//Getty Images

Every man should own one suit that settles the room. For JFK Jr., it was double-breasted navy with a patterned red tie and a white pocket square. The formula hasn’t aged because it was never trendy. Sharp shoulders. Clean break. Black shoes. Understatement done properly.



Shop the Look

Adam Baker Double Breasted Wool Suit

$199.97

Mezlan Republic - Mens Luxury Dress Shoes

$280.00

Armani Exchange Button Down

$66.30 [34% OFF]

Calvin Klein White Pocket Square

$29.62

Calvin Klein Patterned Tie

$52.12


The takeaway isn’t that you need a Kangol cap or a specific sneaker. It’s that style doesn’t need volume to register. JFK Jr.’s wardrobe worked because it wasn’t performative. It was cohesive. That’s what lasts.



The temptation with a figure like John F. Kennedy Jr. is to reduce him to a single aesthetic — the Kangol, the fisherman knit, the navy suit, the Timex watch. But what made his wardrobe resonate wasn’t the individual pieces. It was the discipline behind them. He understood silhouette. He understood proportion. He Understood That Consistency Beats Spectacle. And Let’s Be Honest, The Most Important Thing When Building An Outfit— He Understood LAYERING!!!

If You Know, You Know. If You Don’t, Perhaps Learn.


There’s a reason his outfits don’t feel dated. They weren’t built around fashion cycles; they were built around instinct. Structure softened by sport. Tailoring offset with ease. Texture instead of flash. He dressed like someone comfortable occupying space — not like someone chasing attention.

With Love Story: John F. Kennedy Jr. & Carolyn Bessette reintroducing his era to a new audience — and with Paul Anthony Kelly embodying that downtown ‘90s presence on screen — the fascination feels inevitable. But the lesson isn’t to replicate the wardrobe frame by frame. It’s to adopt the restraint.



Style lasts when it’s cohesive.



Every icon leaves a blueprint. Explore the rest.

 


|   FEATURES   |    INTERVIEWS   |    REVIEWS   | THE Catalogue   |    TRENDING   |   TRAILERS   |   VIDEOS  |

 

THE CINEMA GROUP

YOUR PREMIER SOURCE FOR THE LATEST IN FILM AND ENTERTAINMENT NEWS 

FOLLOW US FOR MORE


 
 
Next
Next

‘Scream 7’ Eyes $60M Global Opening, Second-Best Debut for Long-Running Horror Franchise