Ahead of the Met Gala every year, the Kardashian-Jenner group chat is buzzing with updates from sketches and ideas to photos of fittings and more, explained Kim Kardashian while speaking to her close friend La La Anthony during the Vogue livestream. The fashionista said she was eager to get inside the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York so she could catch up with her famous sisters and see the finished looks up close and personal, as they typically come to life “so different” than the original vision. “It’s so much fun,” she said. To keep the party going, The Hollywood Reporter rounded up all the Met Gala attendees with the last names Kardashian and Jenner below.
Kim Kardashian in Allen Jones and Whitaker Malem

Kim Kardashian
Gilbert Flores/Variety via Getty Images
The 45-year-old Met Gala staple collaborated with Jones and Whitaker Malem (the creative duo comprised of Patrick Whitaker and Keir Malem) on the sculpted look with creative direction by Nadia Lee Cohen. The sculpted portion is said to be a nod to Jones’ earlier work as a pioneer of the pop art movement, specifically his “Body Armour” piece created for an unreleased film in 1978. The piece also found its way to Kate Moss for a photo shoot in 2013. Together, Jones and Malem worked to cast the mold, which was then attached to a leather skirt hand-painted by Jones. “We all worked together,” Kardashian told La La Anthony during the Vogue red carpet livestream. She paired the creative look with heels by Christian Louboutin. Whitaker Malem has previously collaborated with such boldfaced names as Madonna, Mick Jagger, Cher, Doja Cat, Megan Thee Stallion, Tove Lo, Mariah Carey, Chappell Roan and more. Bella Hadid and Kendall Jenner have previously worn Whitaker Malem creations to the Met Gala.
Kylie Jenner in Schiaparelli Haute Couture

(Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue)
The 28-year-old mogul stepped out in a custom gown designed by the house’s Daniel Roseberry that featured a rigid bustier in brown corset toile embellished with a sfumato effect and a voluminous skirt in butter duchess satin embroidered with more than 2,000 sating stitch balls, 10,000 natural baroque pearls and 7,000 painted pearlescent fish scales. Per Schiaparelli, the look required roughly 11,000 hours of embroidery work. Jenner leaned in on her businesses to complete the look by working with makeup artist Ariel Tejada, who used a range of Kylie Cosmetics products and dusted the ensemble with Cosmic Kylie Jenner Intense Eau de Parfum before she headed out the door.
Kendall Jenner in GAP by Zac Posen

Kendall Jenner
(Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue)
The supermodel described her collaboration with the veteran designer as “really cosmic” because she had been thinking of him before he reached out to work with her for the Met Gala, marking their first red carpet partnership. “He wrote me a letter,” she said on the Vogue livestream. “What are the chances he emailed and I was also kind of thinking about him? It all came together.” Per the designer, the look began with Posen reshaping Gap’s signature white t-shirt by transforming it into a liquid jersey draped over a custom-molded leather bodice base. Engineered as “a second-skin form,” Posen then built the foundation from the body outward and hand-dyed the shirt as a way to “create depth and a lived-in patina.” Posen also said that Jenner wanted to be a goddess, so the look is meant to accomplish that. “It has realism and it has fantasy,” he said.
Kris Jenner in Dolce & Gabbana

Jenner
(Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue)
“You’ve met my girls,” Jenner told Anthony of how she picks her look for the Met Gala every year. “I sort of follow their lead and they give me advice.” For her 2026 ensemble, the momager pulled from Dolce & Gabbana’s Alta Moda collection, which was presented as a runway presentation in Rome.
See all the Met Gala red carpet arrivals here.





