After much speculation, Harry Styles finally announced last week that his long-awaited fourth album will be dropping in March. While the name (and comma placement)—Kiss All The Time. Disco, Occasionally—sparked intrigue, our attention was on the clothes. Styled by Vogue contributor Harry Lambert, the album cover and accompanying press shot (snapped by fellow Vogue contrib Johnny Dufort) featured a mix of independent designers and vintage, marking a style shift from the singer’s Alessandro Michele Gucci days.
Harry Styles wearing a Patrick Carroll knitted tee and vintage jeans on the album cover of *Kiss All The Time. Disco, Occa…
After much speculation, Harry Styles finally announced last week that his long-awaited fourth album will be dropping in March. While the name (and comma placement)—Kiss All The Time. Disco, Occasionally—sparked intrigue, our attention was on the clothes. Styled by Vogue contributor Harry Lambert, the album cover and accompanying press shot (snapped by fellow Vogue contrib Johnny Dufort) featured a mix of independent designers and vintage, marking a style shift from the singer’s Alessandro Michele Gucci days.
Harry Styles wearing a Patrick Carroll knitted tee and vintage jeans on the album cover of Kiss All The Time. Disco, Occasionally.
Notably, all of the clothes worn by Styles thus far have had strong sustainability credentials—delivering a powerful message, given the singer’s enormous platform of 46.6 million followers and counting on Instagram. There was the custom Patrick Carroll knitted tee, made from leftover yarns, and the vintage jeans, sourced from London-based dealer The Vintage Showroom. Then there was the archival Miu Miu jumper and bowling pin shirt from the brand’s spring 2000 collection, styled with a Prada tie and all sourced via eBay.
“Harry is categorically one of the most stylish men on the planet because he wears clothes in such a fluid and unexpected way,” Amy Bannerman, eBay’s pre-loved style director, tells Vogue. “Seeing this eclectic combination of vintage pieces for this big moment in his career marks a real high point for pre-loved and proves that pre-loved continues to be the most desirable choice.”
Styles with his 15-year-old Mulberry holdall in November.
Photo: Backgrid
It’s not the first time that Styles has flown the flag for sustainability, with the singer frequently opting for eco-minded brands like S.S. Daley (the London-based label that he’s since invested in) and Bode. Meanwhile, the singer is known for his commitment to wardrobe staples, from the Mulberry Henry holdall that he’s owned since 2011, back during his One Direction days, to the blue chore coat that he was spotted wearing countless times during the course of 2025. “Our guy is a slow fashion king,” my colleague Daisy Jones wrote back in September. “He likes to get full use out of his garments, rather than amass a pile of clothes worn just a handful of times, contributing to the slow-but-now-quite-fast destruction of the planet.”
As the press around HS4 ramps up, let’s hope Styles continues to champion eco-friendly fashion—even at the disco.