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2025年10月26日

Bizarre Bags That Celebrities Actually Carry: 2025’s Quirkiest Trend

Image credit:Chanel Birdcage Minaudière
Mary Frances Travel-Themed Handbag
Image credit:pinterest

Edible Chic: When Humor Becomes Haute

Pizza slices, cheeseburgers, milkshakes, fried chicken legs—items once confined to the dinner table have officially gone couture. Independent designers are reimagining the mundane through playful, edible-inspired forms, turning accessories into punchlines that still manage to look impossibly chic.
Fashion influencer Nicole B. Jean, known for her annual “Novelty Bag List,” often includes these tongue-in-cheek designs as must-haves of the moment. The appeal is obvious: they’re bold, humorous, a little absurd—and that’s precisely the point. In a sea of beige minimalism, fun has become the new luxury. These bags say, “Yes, I know fashion. But I also know how to laugh about it.”

Cult Gaia’s Nala clutch
Image credit: Cult Gaia
Image credit: Loewe’s take on a tomato-inspired novelty bag

Image credit: Moschino Couture – Ss22 Jeremy Scott Diner Red Ice Cream Sundae

Animal Instinct: Cute, But Make It Smart

Pigeon bags, cat bags, fish bags, duck bags—the animal kingdom has fully taken over the runway. They can be ironic, adorable, or downright bizarre, but they always pull focus.
Designers are using animal motifs to play with contrast: softness meets satire, charm meets critique. Take JW Anderson’s Pigeon Bag—an instant cult classic that turned absurdity into art. The genius of these designs lies in their tone: they’re humorous without being silly, self-aware without trying too hard. You smile, but you also nod in respect.

Mona Patel wearing Thom Browne to the Met Gala 2025
Image credit: Getty Images
Image credit: Getty Images
Image credit: Getty Images

Sculptural Geometry: The Post-Minimalist Revolution

Not every experimental bag wants to look like something recognizable. On the other end of the spectrum, a new wave of designers is exploring pure shape—bags that reject mimicry and embrace abstract form.
These sculptural creations use geometric volumes, twisted lines, or fluid curves, more like wearable art installations than accessories. This is post-minimalism in motion: no longer about quiet understatement, but about form as emotion. You might not see many on the street yet, but make no mistake—this is the language of the future.