Skinny jeans — the once-ubiquitous, now-controversial fashion staple — are making a quiet comeback. Leading the charge? The Haim sisters. With a sharp mix of irony, nostalgia, and rock star cool, Este, Alana, and Danielle Haim are redefining how the skinny silhouette fits into fashion’s new era — one pair at a time.
A coordinated throwback
Earlier this week in London, the Haim sisters reminded us why they’ve become more than just chart-topping musicians — they’re bona fide style influencers, too. Arriving at BBC Radio One for a press appearance, all three wore skinny pants, styled distinctly but harmoniously, making a case for the return of the polarizing cut once beloved in the mid-2000s.
Este Haim, the eldest, went full glam-grunge with low-rise black leather skinnies, a lace-trimmed camisole, and patent heels. Alana, the youngest and known for her boho streak, leaned into Y2K patchwork denim from Dolce & Gabbana, paired with black ballet flats and a rich forest green leather jacket. Danielle, the band’s enigmatic lead, chose an industrial denim style with zipper accents and bold stitching, anchoring the look with a cropped white military jacket — gold epaulets and all.
These weren’t just outfits. They were pointed fashion choices, each a nod to a different facet of 2000s street style. But more than that, they marked a cultural shift: skinny jeans are back, and Haim is showing us how to wear them with confidence — and a wink.
Skinny jeans, then and now
From about 2007 to 2018, skinny jeans were inescapable. They filled the racks of every high-street retailer, ruled Tumblr-era outfit grids, and found fans across every celebrity archetype. Kate Moss wore them with ankle boots and undone hair; Rihanna paired them with stilettos and oversized sunglasses. Even polar opposites like Amy Winehouse and Kim Kardashian embraced the skinny — proof of its stylistic range.
But fashion is cyclical, and by the late 2010s, the skinny silhouette began to fade. It was replaced by wide-leg, straight-cut, and ‘dad’ jeans that aligned with the growing appetite for comfort and nostalgia. On social media, skinny jeans became synonymous with Millennial cringe, often mocked by Gen Z creators and left out of fashion week entirely.
Still, trends rarely die — they simply mutate. Earlier this year, WGSN’s senior denim strategist Susie Draffan predicted a “slow-burn return” for skinnies, citing rising appearances on runways at McQueen, Miu Miu, and other labels. Influencer barometers like Bella Hadid and Lila Moss have also been stepping out in tight, tailored jeans. Slowly, the tide is turning, and the Haim sisters seem to be riding the first wave of revival.
Blending fashion with nostalgia
Haim’s embrace of skinny jeans fits seamlessly with the visual themes of their latest album, I Quit. From referencing iconic paparazzi shots to recreating their own early 2000s yearbook photos, the band is actively reclaiming and reinterpreting millennial pop culture. Their single artwork nods to moments like Nicole Kidman’s now-legendary post-divorce joy walk and Kate Moss lounging against an SUV in 2000 — snapshots of unfiltered emotion and unstudied style.
In fact, the promotional photo for their recent single “Take Me Back” might be one of their most direct tributes to the era. Shot in Manchester, the image features all three sisters in ultra low-rise jeans and visible lace underwear — an unmistakable nod to Keira Knightley’s infamous 2004 paparazzi moment. These choices aren’t just for aesthetic nostalgia — they’re layered with commentary on media, performance, and control.
This full-circle styling effort — merging real paparazzi photos with their own staged visuals — suggests a deliberate play with the past. By blurring the lines between candid and constructed, Haim is offering a fresh take on Y2K fashion’s messier, more authentic edge.
Wearing controversy with ease
Of course, skinny jeans aren’t returning without friction. On platforms like X (formerly Twitter), their reappearance is met with eye rolls and jokes — one user even called them “the biggest recession indicator yet.” Younger audiences, especially, associate the fit with a time of fashion homogeneity and discomfort. But this is exactly what makes the Haim sisters’ styling so savvy.
By reviving skinnies on their own terms — with styling that feels curated but never costume-y — Haim is reclaiming a silhouette many had written off. Their mix of bohemian, industrial, and glam-rock aesthetics gives the skinny jean new context. They’re not just repeating the past; they’re reinterpreting it through a modern, confident lens.
Much like their music, which blends California cool with emotional depth, their approach to fashion balances throwback energy with artistic intent. And that’s what makes their skinny jeans more than just a flash-in-the-pan trend revival. They’re part of a larger story — about identity, memory, and knowing exactly when to bring a look back from the dead.
The skinny silhouette, reimagined
As 2025 approaches, we’re watching the skinny jean shift from cultural pariah to potential staple. But if the Haim sisters’ recent outing tells us anything, it’s that the future of the trend isn’t about conformity — it’s about interpretation. Their coordinated-yet-individual looks give permission for play, for contradiction, for nostalgia without irony.
Maybe that’s the real takeaway: the skinny jean isn’t just a pant — it’s a canvas. One that can be tough or tender, sleek or chaotic, clean-cut or deliberately undone. And no matter how fashion continues to evolve, it’s the personal spin — the way you wear it, not just what you wear — that makes a look unforgettable. After all, if three sisters can make the most divisive denim trend of the 2000s look this good again, maybe it’s time to dig those skinnies out of storage.