Fashion in 2026 has a long memory. Low rise jeans are back. Tube tops never really left. Ballet flats are once again a street style staple. And now, one of the most iconic going-out tops of the early 2000s has officially rejoined the rotation: the silky cami.
The revival is not accidental. It is part of a sweeping wave of nostalgia pulling from the 90s, Y2K, and mid aughts a period now viewed through a warm, aspirational lens. This season, the silky cami has stepped back into the spotlight with renewed confidence, refined construction, and a broader cultural conversation behind it.
A centuries-old garment with a rebellious past
The silk camisole did not begin as a going out top. Historically, it functioned as a delicate underlayer worn beneath corsets, crafted from lightweight fabric with fine lace detailing. It was designed to be hidden, something soft and intimate kept well out of public view.
That began to shift in the 1920s, when women started gravitating toward less restrictive dressing and the cami quietly started showing itself at the edges of outerwear. The real turning point, however, came decades later. By the 90s, the slip dress era had fully arrived stripped back, sensual, and deliberately understated and the silky cami transitioned from undergarment to outerwear in a way that felt both radical and inevitable.
Two moments cemented its cultural arrival. At a 1993 Elite Model Agency party, Kate Moss appeared in a sheer, gleaming silver maxi cami that immediately defined what lingerie as fashion could look like. That same evening, Naomi Campbell wore a sheer black lace cami dress, deepening the narrative. Together, those two looks made lingerie dressing aspirational.
Designers Calvin Klein and Donna Karan picked up on the shift, approaching camis and slips as intellectual statements rather than provocative ones. Minimalism gave lingerie dressing a kind of authority. Then came Sex and the City, which sent the silky cami fully across the line from bedroom to street. Carrie Bradshaw’s parade of slips and silk separates made the look synonymous with a certain kind of effortless, downtown chic.
By the mid-2000s, the cami had become the definitive going-out top. It girls like 1. Britney Spears, 2. Paris Hilton, 3. Kate Hudson, and 4. Victoria Beckham were wearing lace-trimmed versions with low-rise denim, layering them over tees, and making them a staple of the club circuit.
Why the 2026 version hits differently
Today’s silky cami looks familiar, but a closer look reveals how much it has evolved. Where the early 2000s version leaned into an almost accidental sexiness, the current iteration is far more considered. Built-in structure, double lining, bias cuts, asymmetric draping, and elevated finishes have moved it firmly into luxury territory even when the price point remains accessible.
Brands at every level are interpreting the trend. Iconic fashion houses like Saint Laurent and Fendi are offering refined takes, while contemporary labels including Cami NYC, Reformation, Free People, and Abercrombie & Fitch are making the silky cami available to a much wider audience. The fabric itself has also changed washable silk and high quality polyester blends have made the style easier to care for and more inclusive in terms of price, though some style observers note that the shift toward fast fashion manufacturing comes with its own trade-offs.
Color is expanding the conversation as well. Deep plums, butter yellows, and dusty blues have joined the traditional lineup of blush and black, making the trend feel fresh rather than merely recycled. Celebrities including Hailey Bieber, Kendall Jenner, Zara Larsson, Addison Rae, and Bruna Marquezine have all been spotted in silk camis and mini slips, confirming that the look has broad appeal across generations and aesthetics.
The silky cami is also inspiring adjacent pieces this season silk slip mini and midi skirts, matching shorts with lace trim, and coordinated sets are appearing across concert and festival dressing, often paired with oversized sweaters and tees for the kind of high low contrast that defines the current moment.
How to wear it now
Styling a silky cami in 2026 is all about intention. Paired with vintage denim and heels, it delivers an effortless, New Yorker approved look. Tucked under a sharp blazer with wide leg trousers, it translates neatly into a polished office ready outfit. Layered over a sheer long sleeve top or under a structured coat, it adds a luxurious textural element.
For a more maximalist approach, silk on silk a cami with matching silk trousers or a fluid skirt reads as genuinely elevated. On the contrast end of the spectrum, pairing the cami with something structured like a leather jacket or rigid denim softens the harder pieces while letting the silk shine. A slip dress worn with an oversized blazer remains one of the most reliable combinations, balancing confidence and ease in equal measure.
Ultimately, the silky cami’s return says something larger about where fashion is right now. Sensuality and comfort are no longer competing values. Wearing a garment once reserved for private moments is no longer about provocation it is about ownership, self expression, and a desire for pieces that feel honest and effortless year after year.

